makes perfect sense to me. They sold you a product not in "whatever
condition" but with a warranty that it will be free of defects. that's
essentially what a warranty is. I don't know what line of work you're in
but I'd guess that you'd want your customer to have the best error free
product possible and if you offered a warranty on your work/product you'd
want to fix it right if you found an error or mistake in it after
delivery. Additionally, there is the potential that the defective part
will cause damage/premature wear to other parts. Hence if you don't have
the correction made, they should not be liable for related problems down
the line. Reputable manufacturers from all walks do it all the time
(e.g. software patches and updates)
Dave Yeung
Houston Region
On Tue, 09 Nov 1999 10:44:24 PST "Chris Marsh" <cmarsh90@hotmail.com>
writes:
>
>Ok makes sense to have a "mandatory" recall, but when they originally
>sold
>you the car they offered a product in whatever condition with a
>warranty,
>seems kind of wrong to me that they would then say "Oh sorry wait we
>screwed
>up if you don't let us do this you don't have a warranty".
>
>Chris Marsh
>
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