Quote:
Originally Posted by thebreaker27
How much does the independent mechanic auditor will charge?
Try to convince someone doing this like if the auction already existed. Personally I wouldn't want to put my car in the guy whose primarily quality is being the cheapest.
agian depending on how many people come to the auction...you can say that the auditor gets 5% of the money earend from coming to the auction etc..
in order for a mechanic to go to the auction he must have some certifaction saying he is capable and doing this blah blah...you can set up a membership with the mechanics that want to come so the mechanics are just some joe shmoes.
Of course, before subbimted your car, youd have to sign a waiver, saying , something along the lines of....I put my broken car up for auction to be fixed and trust that the independant auditor has provided an accurate estimate and willing to pay for the auction price..etc
you, as the person putting your car up for the auction, create a legal liability for your self. kind of like a company declares a divedend...i think. once you sign that wavier you are saying "im willing to pay what ever the auctioned price is to fix my car" and you cant change your mind if you think the price is to high when your vehicales already been auctioned. its just the gamble theyre going to have to take. obviously the independant auditor would tell them before the auction starts if its worth it yadah yadah yada...and they would have a certain time period, say an ohour before the bidding begins to take their car of the lot and not have it bid on.
And im not to sure what you mean by your second statement? care to elaborate?