Stealership
however, if you dropped it in during normal business hours then it is job of the dealership to contact you to justify the expenditures..but not too much that I know for getting money back, unless you call the headquarters
but let me know what happens..
however, if you dropped it in during normal business hours then it is job of the dealership to contact you to justify the expenditures..but not too much that I know for getting money back, unless you call the headquarters
but let me know what happens..
9884.9. (a) The automotive repair dealer shall give to the customer a written estimated price for labor and parts necessary for a specific job. No work shall be done and no charges shall accrue before authorization to proceed is obtained from the customer. No charge shall be made for work done or parts supplied in excess of the estimated price without the oral or written consent of the customer that shall be obtained at some time after it is determined that the estimated price is insufficient and before the work not estimated is done or the parts not estimated are supplied.
Now, I'll bet when you picked up the car you signed an agreement that says you were notified of the increase in price. You also signed that agreement BEFORE money changed hands. If so, you're screwed. The time to raise hell has passed. Don't sign anything you don't agree to. When I drop the car, there is a written estimate. That is the extent of our contract. Period. If the price goes up by one cent they'd better have received permission or they eat the costs.
In California, we have a state entity called the BAR - the Bureau of Automotive Repair. The BAR is a division of the California Department of Consumer Affairs - the DCA. The DCA is a regulatory agency for the State of California. They hand out business licenses. If they decide a business shouldn't do business in California, that's it - the business closes their doors. As soon as I saw the increase I'd tell the service manager (not the service writter, but his boss) that I never agreed to ANYTHING beyond the original written estimate. If they threaten to hold the car, call the BAR from the service manager's office and tell them the problem. If they still won't budge, ask to see the dealership's general manager. Explain the problem to him/her. Write their name down and tell him that your going to pay the bill under protest and have have them personally served when you sue them in small claims court. Then call Mercedes Benz from the dealership at the 800 number and tell them exactly what the dealer pulled. All before paying anything.






