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View Full Version : windsor nissan in east windsor nj


TheWraith
05-27-2010, 09:05 AM
avoid this place like the plague.

I went to look at a car last night. An 08 Cadillac CTS4, at Windsor Nissan, in East Windsor, NJ.

This is the car, if it gets pulled, or gets changed, I have screen captures. The vehicle's price is $20,900.

http://www.autotrader.com/fyc/vdp.js...r_id=278027964

and on their site, the price has already changed (I have screen caps here as well of the original price):

http://www.windsornissan.com/vehicle.asp?v=1035880#1

Before I drove all that distance, I used the contact form on autotrader and sent a message to the site, basically asking if the price was correct and if the car was still in stock.

I received this reply:

"Hello Alex:

This is John from Windsor Nissan. I just received information that you are interested in a Cadillac CTS. I am pleased to inform you this vehicle is available.

Please click the following link to view this vehicle on our website:

www.WindsorNissan.com


We are open from 9 AM to 9 PM Monday through Friday, and from 9 AM to 6 PM on Saturdays. Which day and time are you available for a test drive?

Sincerely,

John Kerrigan

Internet Manager

Office :609-448-1411

Windsor Nissan

509 Route 130

East Windsor, NJ 08520"


Note the careful wording doesn't actually answer the question about price, and it also says "interested in A Cadillac CTS", not the specific one. I know all about dealerships tactics, and even if they already sold the car I was looking for, this email would never had said "sorry it sold", it would say exactly what was said above. Sure, they have A CTS they're willing to sell me, just not the one I wanted.

So I replied back:

"John,
thank you for the quick reply.

I'm specifically interested in the bronze (orange) 08 CTS4 you have listed on your site and autotrader for $20,900. I just want to confirm the price, and that it's still there. I'm not actively car shopping, but I happened to notice the ad, and it's the right price for the right car with the right options.

--Alex"



And I received back:

"Yes it is here and the price is right


John Kerrigan

Internet Manager

Office :609-448-1411

Windsor Nissan

509 Route 130

East Windsor, NJ 08520"


Couldn't say it any more clearly than that. So after work I took a ride out there with my brother, and sure enough the car was there. I'll note, it took 2 hours to get there, and it was about 80 miles. It says $33,000 on the front window of the car and window sticker. So I get a salesperson (Tony), and he gets me the keys out of a drawer right inside the dealership door, and I look the car over for a minute, and basically bring up the massive price discrepancy.

He says, he doesn't know anything about that, so we walk inside the dealership for him to check on the computers. At that time he remembered their power was out. My brother noticed there was even a sign that said the power had been out since 4:30pm. That will come back in a minute. So I pull it up on my iphone and show him. And sure enough, $20,900. Tony carefully words his reply that he's not sure if it's accurate and he'll have to check with another person.

I explain that I had emails from John Kerrigan stating the price was correct, and I thought there might be a mistake in the price too, which is exactly why my contact with John SPECIFICALLY wanted to check the validity of the price. I offer to show them to Tony on the iphone.

At this point, I was hoping for SOMETHING for my trouble, not necessarily for them to sell me the car thousands of dollars in the hole, but at least something of value to cover my gas money - $20, gift certificate, hat and t-shirt, whatever. I just didn't want to leave empty handed really since it was 100% their fault this situation happened.

Tony gets another person, presumably a manager, who I believe was identified as Mike. Tony fills him in on the situation. Next is where things completed turned.

Mike says something to me to the effect of "Sorry sir, that car sold this afternoon. For $27,000. We had someone come in and purchase 20 cars at once. All the keys are in the back office for those cars. Isn't that right Tony?" There were so many holes in that story, you could drive aircraft carriers through them. Tony even wouldn't commit to the BS, he kept his mouth shut and stopped making eye contact with anyone else. He obviously knew Mike had crossed the line, and even he was embarrassed.

So I picked up on a few things in his story. First off, no one buys 20 cars at once. Second, my last email from John Kerrigan was at 2:09 PM. So the window they had to sell this particular vehicle was less than 2 hours until the power went out. Not likely. Third, the keys to the car, supposedly in the back room, were taken out of a drawer in a desk in the showroom, by Tony, while I watched, and were currently in Tony's hand. Fourth, the car was parked in 3 deep. And it started up slowly and a little rough, as though it hadn't been started in days. I seriously doubt anyone would buy a car without test driving it.

And last, this one I noticed after the fact of course, but as noted above they already went to the trouble of changing the price of the car on their website, within 3 hours of leaving there. If it really had sold, wouldn't they have removed it from the site instead??

So this guy was totally full of ****, and beyond that it was an embarrassing insult to my intelligence. Mike walked up totally uninformed on the situation thinking he would be smart and defuse the situation with a whopper of a lie. Even the price he noted - $27,000 - I'm sure that was carefully crafted so that he hoped I would reply "$27,000, wow, that's a wonderful price, a mere $6,000 more than the one I drove here for. Do you have another one like it you can sell me for that price? Maybe 2 or 3?"

My reply: "That's a great story, but I don't believe a word of it." Let's just say, that led to a big scene, where Mike confirmed his maturity multiple times over again and we left without accomplishing anything. Except the loss of about 10 gallons of my gas, and 5 hours of my time.

These guys are scum. They live up to, or exceed every shady car salesman stereotype imaginable. Do not deal with them. If not for the other people they've already screwed over countless times, so they don't screw you over instead. Do research online too. I'm not the only one they've played games with.

BonzoHansen
05-27-2010, 09:22 AM
That sucks. Why didn't actually call before you drove down? He obvisouly wasn't going to give you an answer via email.

Frosty
05-27-2010, 09:55 AM
He did give him the answer in the 2nd email, said the car was there and the price was correct.

What a douche bag move.

Blacdout96
05-27-2010, 10:02 AM
Yeah, workign in the internet deprtment before at a Taoyota dealership, emails arent anything, best to call.

The story might not be a complete BS, whole saler's come in and pick up cars that are non dealership cars ( I.e non Nissan cars) We tailored to them alot, and more often then not a used car inthe pages that everyone wanted to buy was already on a trailer headed to their dealership or auction. I thought it was douchy to tell people sure when it wasetn there in the first place.

TheWraith
05-27-2010, 10:02 AM
That sucks. Why didn't actually call before you drove down? He obvisouly wasn't going to give you an answer via email.

The second email was "Yes it is here and the price is right"

doesn't get much more clear than that. I would not have wasted my time if it wasn't 100% convinced that the price was legit.

Blacdout96
05-27-2010, 10:10 AM
The second email was "Yes it is here and the price is right"

doesn't get much more clear than that. I would not have wasted my time if it wasn't 100% convinced that the price was legit.

We got commision on bringing people in, wheither they were buyign ass soon as they walked through the door, or they took two steps in and said **** it, we got them in there, so we got paid.

FoodStampsz
05-27-2010, 11:07 AM
I actually work at that ford dealer right next door to them lol they are crooks and everyone in the area knows it. Even if the price worked for you they buy all the cars at auction and don't do a thorough safety check. They sold an escalade to a guy who couldnt afford it and put him out on the arm for $10,000 so the bank thought he had more money down than he really did. Crooks through and through.

Tsar
05-27-2010, 11:49 AM
I actually work at that ford dealer right next door to them lol they are crooks and everyone in the area knows it. Even if the price worked for you they buy all the cars at auction and don't do a thorough safety check. They sold an escalade to a guy who couldnt afford it and put him out on the arm for $10,000 so the bank thought he had more money down than he really did. Crooks through and through.

I fail to see how someone not having enough money is a fault of the dealer? This is a clear case of not enough brains.

BonzoHansen
05-27-2010, 11:53 AM
The second email was "Yes it is here and the price is right"

doesn't get much more clear than that. I would not have wasted my time if it wasn't 100% convinced that the price was legit.

Whoops, I missed your previous comment to him with the exact price in it. He does suck.

FoodStampsz
05-27-2010, 12:23 PM
I fail to see how someone not having enough money is a fault of the dealer? This is a clear case of not enough brains.

They loaned him the down payment... A dealership under no circumstances can loan a customer money unless they are listed as the lien holder. They gave the guy money so the bank thought he had more money down, they then kept him on the hook to pay them back. It's extremely fraudulent and the guy ended up in repo

xrelapse13
05-27-2010, 09:49 PM
wow that's ****ed up. BUT, just so you know, if a seller (Dealer, store, etc..) posts an item for a certain price and you can show valid proof of that, they are required by law to sell you that item for that price. Unless its an obvious typo like 100 instead of 1000, then they have some recourse in court. But something like 20,000 dollars instead of 33,000 isn't a typo, and by law they must sell you the car at the advertised price as long as you have a printout.

My mom bought her audi like that a few years ago. Found it listed for 23k, came to the dealer and it was 31k. Said she had the printout and showed it and they folded. Someone else came to look at the car and they told them it was 31k and unless they had hard copy evidence of the different price they wouldn't honor the price.

fmybody
05-27-2010, 09:59 PM
cold bloodedd... damnn id be pissed too.. but u know what they say right?

"if something seems too good to be true.. it probably is"

nj85z28
05-29-2010, 06:40 PM
wow that's ****ed up. BUT, just so you know, if a seller (Dealer, store, etc..) posts an item for a certain price and you can show valid proof of that, they are required by law to sell you that item for that price. Unless its an obvious typo like 100 instead of 1000, then they have some recourse in court. But something like 20,000 dollars instead of 33,000 isn't a typo, and by law they must sell you the car at the advertised price as long as you have a printout.

My mom bought her audi like that a few years ago. Found it listed for 23k, came to the dealer and it was 31k. Said she had the printout and showed it and they folded. Someone else came to look at the car and they told them it was 31k and unless they had hard copy evidence of the different price they wouldn't honor the price.

similar story recently when the guy won the new challenger on ebay for something like 26k and the dealer eventually had to sell it to him for that price

r0nin89
05-29-2010, 08:21 PM
similar story recently when the guy won the new challenger on ebay for something like 26k and the dealer eventually had to sell it to him for that price

Yeah ebay is a binding contract though. I dont think anyone is obligated to honor a price with all the little fine print and fast voices on ads now a days.

Take lester glenn hyundai for example. They offer $5000 over KBB for trade in. They dont tell you on the add $1400 of that is military/college grab bonus and that they mark the cars up $3500 so you only actually get $1400 off if your military or college grad...

Blacdout96
06-01-2010, 11:15 AM
People needs to wake up an realize dealerships are out for your money, they arent goign to give a car away for a crazy price. just like you said about Lester Glenn. Dealerships buy the at a price ,and they had a minimum set price that almost nobody touches because they have to pay what they owe on the car, they haveto pay the seller, the commision, and still make money on the side. If I had money to piss away, ure Id buy a new car, but really, it's not worth it in the end to buy a new car, ever.

V
06-01-2010, 02:49 PM
http://www.windsornissan.com/vehicle.asp?v=1057863#1

im trying to figure out where the radio knobs went....