Tell her the car was sold "as is", and that you had no further responsibility with it being a private sale after 3 days. Section 57 of the Consumer Rights Act of 2015 does not apply to private sales (UK), and primarily applies to services, not to hard goods.
Any wear on the vehicle while it was in her possession were attributable to her, and any repairs that were required as a result of her improper care and use are her responsibility.
Obviously, no "fault" in the engine was evident while it was in your possession, nor was any "fault" detected by her for 3 months, which was well beyond any reasonable time for her to have detected such a problem and to have returned the vehicle.
Section 57 simply does not apply against an individual involved in a private sale -
SOURCE: put new tires on front(dealership in march-rear in
You probably need to balance your tires? Hit any curbs lately, any large bumps? You can check this by doing either 50 mph or 70 mph. If the vibration is most notable at those speeds then your tires need to be balanced. If it is all the time then it could be a bent rim or a bad tire itself. Bent rims can be balanced out to a degree, but defective tires cannot.
SOURCE: Am I liable for the repairs?
no way
he is a registered??? dealer and buys cars as is from people
many dealers buy and old car as a trade in so it he had a case against you then all of those dealers would be asking the sellers to repair all of those trades as well
Sounds like a real shonky dealer who perhaps could get a taste of his own medicine and lies by having you report him to the business registry department and have his business closed down
Testimonial: "Jip he is a registered dealer and the best thing of all when he bought my car he did not do any inspections or anything he just said "oky here is you're new car keys and those keys belong to me now" and the next day he started to send me messages of the car parts that he must replace and he wants me to make him a offer of down payment"
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