Toby458?The rifle has sold!
-matt
Glad you got some closure.
I suspect this was overall a pretty painful experience, and didn't end how you hoped, but I think we all learned some things from this thread that can help each of us stay out of trouble on future deals?
...Rest assured that I will not work on this rifle no matter who decide to buy it.
What do you think about that Supercat
Butch Searcy
Right on Iwaters! I too think the Ruger No1 is the most reliable rifle ever made - no feed issues, no misfires, no extractor issues, no breach opening. Perfect!Heck I think my Ruger No. 1 in 450/400 loaded with swift A-frame at over 2200 is safer than some of this stuff that jams won't feed or regulate. If I do my part it will put then in a inch group. I think to many people expect to much out these double which are made for close range stopping.
Come on now! I'm not the only one on here going through the 12 step program!Toby458?
And using his own words from his post would be a powerful statement.FWIW. The circle of the rifle is now complete. 1.) Purchased it with a stated or implied warranty. (on Searcy website it says there is a warranty and its void if a different gunsmith works on the gun), 2.) The gun was defective. 3.) The maker honored a warranty claim and did a repair. 4.) The repair was not appropriate and didn't cure the problem. It also lowered the value of the gun. 5.) The maker would not stand behind the warranty work and then changed the terms to end the warranty without justification. 6.) The gun was sold for a significant loss. (real damages).
That may be enough to file a suit now that damages are provable. The fact that a warranty was performed proves there was a warranty. The failure to cure the defect shows bad faith. The voiding of the warranty after a shoddy repair shows the maker violated his own terms. The sale for a tremendous loss due to the defective repair and refusal to warranty the gun further shows the damages.
In some jurisdictions the small claims maximums are quite high, often $5000-$6000. You may be able to sue in a jurisdiction other than the county in which the maker is present.
In short, this is not legal advice but a scenario by a non-attorney that suggests you should run this by an actual attorney for advice. It seems plausible that you have a claim.
...
In some jurisdictions the small claims maximums are quite high, often $5000-$6000. You may be able to sue in a jurisdiction other than the county in which the maker is present.
...
I would retract my statement regarding the VC....that was 3 years ago...I had handled them and the outside made me blind to the inside...Jerome was a super salesman and actually had me all measured up for what I wanted to order....thanfully I came to my senses and did not place the order.Yip.
I will never look at nor buy a Butch Searcy double rifle, new or used.
Buy a VC used or new it comes with superb after sales service and is a properly built double rifle to start with.