**The Dark Side of Lawyers and the Justice System**
It's no secret that many people view lawyers with skepticism, and for good reason. Some lawyers are downright unscrupulous, using their positions to exploit and manipulate others for personal gain. Take, for example, the case of OJ Simpson, who was represented by a team of high-priced lawyers despite being accused of murder. It's hard not to wonder if some of these lawyers might be more interested in lining their own pockets than in serving justice.
The attorney-client privilege is meant to protect sensitive information shared between a lawyer and their client, but at what cost? Some lawyers will stop at nothing to keep certain information from coming to light, even if it means hiding evidence or coercing witnesses into silence. Take, for instance, the case of Michael Avenatti, who was caught trying to extort Nike out of $20 million in exchange for keeping quiet about his client's claims of wrongdoing. This kind of behavior is unacceptable and erodes trust in the justice system as a whole.
One can't help but think of other cases where lawyers have taken advantage of their clients or engaged in questionable practices. From extortion to hiding evidence, it's clear that some lawyers are more interested in making a buck than in serving justice. This is not to say that all lawyers are bad news – there are certainly many who are honest and hardworking professionals. However, when you look at the big picture, it's hard to ignore the fact that the system can sometimes be flawed.
**Dealerships and Customer Service**
But what about dealerships? Can we trust them to treat us fairly and make things right if something goes wrong with a purchase? Unfortunately, it seems that some dealerships may not always have our best interests at heart. Take, for example, the case of a customer who brought their car in for service and was offered a paltry $220 for its value – far less than what they were originally quoted. The dealership's response? To push the issue further and try to get the customer to take less than they were willing to accept.
This kind of behavior is not only frustrating, but it also highlights a deeper problem with the way that dealerships often operate. When you bring your car in for service or purchase a new vehicle, you're counting on these companies to treat you fairly and make things right if something goes wrong. Unfortunately, this is not always the case.
**Adventures and Bucket List Travel**
Despite the ups and downs of life, there's still plenty to be excited about. For those who love adventure and want to experience new things, I've got just the thing: Adventure Drives! This unique company combines driving with bucket list travel, allowing you to explore new places while getting your adrenaline fix. Whether you're looking for a solo trip or something more adventurous with friends, Adventure Drives has something for everyone.
Prices are very reasonable and can be customized to fit your budget and preferences. Plus, the team is always happy to help match you up with like-minded travelers who share your interests. So why not give it a try? With Adventure Drives, you'll be able to check off some amazing experiences from your bucket list in no time.
**Conclusion**
In conclusion, while there are certainly many good lawyers and reputable dealerships out there, there's also a darker side to these professions that can't be ignored. From extortion to hiding evidence, it's clear that some individuals will stop at nothing to get ahead – even if it means exploiting or manipulating others. As for dealerships, they can sometimes fall short in terms of customer service and fair treatment.
However, there are still plenty of bright spots out there. Whether you're looking for adventure travel or just want to explore new places, Adventure Drives is here to help. With its unique approach to bucket list travel and driving experiences, this company is sure to leave you with unforgettable memories and a whole lot of excitement.
"WEBVTTKind: captionsLanguage: enall right everybody Rob for ready here and this is another good one everybody likes to look at my stories that I share and say like wow that guy's got the worst luck I don't really have the worst luck it's just the nature of the beast I've had employees damage and crash cars before it's just you know what happens well this time it happened to a Ferrari dealerships in San Antonio and that Ferrari being crashed by an employee ended up costing or is potentially gonna cost the dealership almost a million dollars or up to a million dollars because there's a lawsuit so here's what happened Texas businessman we'll just leave it at that I don't want to get into what he does or anything like that I don't think it's incredibly relevant for this but he is a guy who brought his 2014 458 Spyder to the dealership on consignment consignment means that you are giving your vehicle to the dealership to sell if the your dealership can't if they sell it they take a commission if they can't sell it they give it back the dealer is not buying it from you - then floor plan and sell it there legitimately putting a third party car in their showroom to attract the buyer - then take a piece of that transaction as it finishes now the story from the lawsuit is that the dealership got this car one of the guys in the dealership joy rode the car crashed it and then the dealership scrambled convinced the guy who owned the car to take less than he wanted to take and then reveal that the car was crashed after they were they agreed to a payout and then the guys like whoa whoa whoa I'm not accepting the payout and you and and they looked at that as an opportunity to squeeze the dealer right now they're claiming like fraud and negligence and I don't know if I necessarily agree here that this is sort of a little bit more open-and-shut than a million dollar lawsuit because whether or not the dealer acknowledged that the car was crashed that's like just bad business like hey your car was crashed but if you bring your car to the dealership for sale right yeah the emotional attachments over you're selling your car right I will take and they listed the car for two hundred and forty thousand which is retail 239 five hundred whatever it was two hundred forty thousand is every penny of a 2014 458 Spyder so right there you're trying to get retail assume the car sells to twenty five to twenty whatever it was they said they got a buyer at 220 and that the guy was going to agree to take 220 and receive 210 right so clearly like if you're agreeing to accept 210 thousand dollars for your car and you're happy with that whether the car is on fire at the bottom of a lake shouldn't really matter you've now accepted verbally or not that you're gonna take two hundred and ten thousand dollars for the car whether or not they like look I think this is a good that you've accepted to take two hundred and ten thousand dollars for your car let's just look at that's step one now next step is like oh yeah at the car was crashed whoa wait a second cars crashed I don't want to take two hundred and ten thousand dollars anymore this is where I can say sure you know what now you may be entitled today don't get a commission I don't get it you get two hundred and twenty thousand that's what the sale would have been two twenty-five you could try to squeeze it just for the PR aspect of it that that they'll pay you to twenty five for the car and then they'll eat whatever loss there is right that's not where they stopped this turned into like and this is why people hate retrieval at least why I hate certain rich people is that people look for this payday I've been wrong though I've been wrong come on you had a call you had a widget the widgets worth two hundred and twenty five thousand now forget what they were asking for like full retail guy who's been dreaming about that exact spec car forever that buyer doesn't really exist the car is worth just say 225 right you get you 225 you're good whether the car gets whether a guy lights it on fire whether guy pushes it off a cliff shouldn't make a difference so you can be made whole by somebody giving you 225 you feel tricked deceive that the car was crashed or whatever I get asking for the 225 asking for a million dollars pushing the like treble-damage claiming fraud and negligence you're not harmed your harm stops at receiving full payment for what you had at the dealer for sale right like I don't understand and and this is sort of like a touchy one I think this is gonna split the audience as far as like that was my car if that was my car if you're happy putting a car for sale and getting full value for it that's it you know now yes they're claiming negligence employees damaged cars it happens oh the guy was joyriding you don't know if the guy was joyriding guy could have been backing it up in the in the shop or something hit a pole I know that's not the situation here but like stuff happens like do you have employees at the dealership cars get damaged it's just what happens to then try to say like well that was negligence negligence is one of my least favorite words because anything where something happens it's very simple that was negligent well maybe it didn't crash it like it's negligent to crash like you clearly did something wrong because if you didn't do something wrong there would be no negligence and there wouldn't be a crack like that drives me nuts so claiming negligence claiming fraud is a different story claiming fraud is that the loss you could claim is that the car was worth 225 and they paid you 210 which you accepted but that $15,000 could be the fraud you were receiving less monetary compensation than value of your asset right so but even in any case no matter how it works whether the dealership takes three thousand five thousand ten thousand the dealership at the end of the day was buying a car for two hundred and ten thousand dollars that was arguably now worth even when repaired 195 200 whatever it's worth so they're paying more than the damn things worth and even with the accident on it before they pay to repair it may be worth 150 I don't know what the actual damage was I don't know any of those details but the fact that people now I'm getting a lawyer I'm suing I'm doing that our legal system stinks like for this to be a thing where were this guy and that we had this case where the other guy got paid whatever was half a million dollars I remember I did a video on it and it was just so like maddening and that these guys get these tremendous payouts it was a 430 that he got you know the manifolds are cracked and I remember this and he claimed fraud and this guy got 3x what the car was even worth so he got a free Ferrari and in several hundreds of thousands of dollars claiming or maybe even Millions I forgot what it was claiming that the dealership was negligent and they lied to him saying that it was sold and we took care of everything and they gave it to him and it wasn't everything taken care of mind-boggling to me like I just don't get it right like that stuff it really it really irks me like to claim that you are somehow harmed when selling something a I'll give you whatever like imagine you somebody buys a piece of art from you that you think is worth $500 it gives you $500 and it turns out there was a Picasso it's worth 40 million dollars you can't sue the guy you agreed to take $500 for the thing what like it's it's your job to either look it up but even if the guy gave you four hundred dollars instead of five hundred dollars you'd have a claim of a hundred the fact that you could take something and then claim all this negligence and fraud and then oh I don't know I can't trust a car dealership ever again it's very very like I don't know it just it just defines what is terrible about our legal system your damages should be capped at the value of the thing that was lost plus if you need legal fees if you have to chase after but like a dealership if you say like you give me that another fifteen grand or I'm gonna sue you deal he's not gonna spend fifteen thousand dollars in legal fees if they do want to spend fifteen thousand dollars on legal fees you sue them you get your fifteen thousand dollars and then you get your damages of whatever legal fees so that the dealership ends up having to pay thirty or forty thousand dollars instead of just right in the check for fifteen in advance that's the stuff I don't get I like I don't know like it's I get like emotional distress I get that stuff like if you do something and like yours like there's anxiety can't sleep etc etc like it impacts your life for a long time guy was selling a car and got paid for the car like it's not whether regardless of what happened behind the scenes I agree like the deal is probably should have just said like look the car was crashed but the dealership did sort of I mean I don't know if I would I'm not in that position but as a business it's like you broke somebody's thing just just go pay for it and we'll deal with it I don't know if it's relevant if somebody's selling something and you break it or you don't break it like to imagine you put something a piece of art for sale in a gallery and you know okay you know what you damage the art instead of saying hey we damage the art hey I got a buyer here's your check if you end up being the buyer who cares like and and the dealership has a completely different take on this this is they're trying to pretend like it's fraud and they negotiate it down and they're and and they they were claiming that there was a buyer but there wasn't a real buyer there very well could have been a buyer at two hundred and twenty thousand and the guy at the dealership crashed the car so now the dealer is like well I can't sell the buyer the car because it's now crashed but hey Joe we had a we have a buyer two hundred and twenty thousand our Commission's ten we'll give you a check for 210 you're good Joe says good that's it so now the dealership is at a disadvantage because they can't sell the car they got to fix it and resell it but they're giving this guy every penny that they were able to get and secure to sell that car and that was that was real money on that car that wasn't like significant where we got a buyer at one thirty the cars worth two twenty five it wasn't significantly below market value so I don't really get the claim that this guy is making I I do get it because people like lawyers love this a lawyer will do this on contingency all day long contingency means that the lawyer is going to say like look I'm you don't have to pay me a dollar I'm gonna go sue them and I'm gonna get thirty percent of whatever I win so that's that's where we're at and the lawyers love this because lawyers are pretty much the worst people on the planet even the lawyers like yeah yeah yeah yeah you signed a deal with the devil that's why you become a lawyer it sucks there's people there defending all these people that are that are clearly guilty but you know what Oh Jay got a defense lawyer because OJ is entitled to a defense and it's just one of those things that you know can't can't fix the world but I agree everybody is entitled to an event at defense they are entitled to be presumed innocent until proven guilty but at the end of the day to like hide evidence there's lawyers the foetus Doulos the guy who just tried to kill himself yesterday up in Connecticut killed his wife his lawyer is now being charged with helping cover up the murder I mean and then there's this big like a attorney-client privilege thing but at a certain point in time they they're rather unscrupulous the the guy avenatti same thing extorting and he's representing stormy Daniels like oh yeah the salt of the earth here and this guy's coming out and going after Nike and trying to extort them for 20 million dollars to do I'm gonna smear you it just shows you that these people are pretty bad news it's not all every lawyer there I'm sure some good lawyers out there maybe one good lawyer out there but most of them sort of staying I'm very happy I didn't follow my path I went to college pre-law and I'm very happy I jumped off that train early on but there you have it leave your comments and the thing below if it was your car they crashed it I would love it if I brought my car in for service and they pushed it off the lift and they're like all right here's a check for the value of your car great especially and that's nuts bringing a car in for service it's not even bringing a car in for for sale if I brought my car for sale I don't care who's writing to check the owner of the dealer the daughter the owner of the dealer I don't care who ends up with that car as long as I received the money and I'm willing to take on that car we got it you got a sale and that's where it should stop I think that's where the lawsuit should stop which hopefully judge if you're watching like this guy is entitled to to the 220 that the car was worth they you're entitled to every penny that the car is worth I don't think you're worth you're entitled to anything beyond that that's just me rob furedi giving you thoughts on this sucks to be the dealership it's more of a black eye and the dealership that they're trying to cover something up but again until I'm in like you know we don't know the actual details or the who knew why who like it just could be a manager scrambling to try to say face because it doesn't look good if you have a customer and it's like all my cars Christ this guy looks at it as an opportunity instead of just saying okay you know what thank you guys are doing the right thing they could easily say hey you make an insurance claim on your insurance that's a different story the the dealership was gonna make this right they attempted to make it right by giving this guy all the money for his car or whatever he was willing to accept for the car or completing the deal that wasn't able to be completed because the car was crashed and my eyes the dealership did what they had to do and I don't know it's it's tough it's like nobody wants to admit that they smashed up a customer's car and and that just complicates it so if you get the guy to agree to take the car if the guy refused to take anything else like I'm not taking less than 240 the dealership probably would have written the check for 240 I don't know I guarantee there's dealerships out there that damage cars and fix them and give them back to you before you even find out about it it's just the way the car world is I'm sorry just the way it is but Rob Freddie thank you for watching leave your comments and thoughts below if you have a Ferrari I still think you're OK to bring it to Ferrari of San Antonio to to consign it to sell it reputable Ferrari dealership I've never heard anything you're not talking about going to cars for cash down the street and crossing your fingers I think you'll be alright adios for those of you not familiar with my other company I started the company called adventure drives which combines driving and bucket list travel it's a lot of fun if you're interested prices can be done per person it's don't worry if you don't have somebody to go with you we can match you up with somebody you can check the link in the description for adventure drives comm and sign up todayall right everybody Rob for ready here and this is another good one everybody likes to look at my stories that I share and say like wow that guy's got the worst luck I don't really have the worst luck it's just the nature of the beast I've had employees damage and crash cars before it's just you know what happens well this time it happened to a Ferrari dealerships in San Antonio and that Ferrari being crashed by an employee ended up costing or is potentially gonna cost the dealership almost a million dollars or up to a million dollars because there's a lawsuit so here's what happened Texas businessman we'll just leave it at that I don't want to get into what he does or anything like that I don't think it's incredibly relevant for this but he is a guy who brought his 2014 458 Spyder to the dealership on consignment consignment means that you are giving your vehicle to the dealership to sell if the your dealership can't if they sell it they take a commission if they can't sell it they give it back the dealer is not buying it from you - then floor plan and sell it there legitimately putting a third party car in their showroom to attract the buyer - then take a piece of that transaction as it finishes now the story from the lawsuit is that the dealership got this car one of the guys in the dealership joy rode the car crashed it and then the dealership scrambled convinced the guy who owned the car to take less than he wanted to take and then reveal that the car was crashed after they were they agreed to a payout and then the guys like whoa whoa whoa I'm not accepting the payout and you and and they looked at that as an opportunity to squeeze the dealer right now they're claiming like fraud and negligence and I don't know if I necessarily agree here that this is sort of a little bit more open-and-shut than a million dollar lawsuit because whether or not the dealer acknowledged that the car was crashed that's like just bad business like hey your car was crashed but if you bring your car to the dealership for sale right yeah the emotional attachments over you're selling your car right I will take and they listed the car for two hundred and forty thousand which is retail 239 five hundred whatever it was two hundred forty thousand is every penny of a 2014 458 Spyder so right there you're trying to get retail assume the car sells to twenty five to twenty whatever it was they said they got a buyer at 220 and that the guy was going to agree to take 220 and receive 210 right so clearly like if you're agreeing to accept 210 thousand dollars for your car and you're happy with that whether the car is on fire at the bottom of a lake shouldn't really matter you've now accepted verbally or not that you're gonna take two hundred and ten thousand dollars for the car whether or not they like look I think this is a good that you've accepted to take two hundred and ten thousand dollars for your car let's just look at that's step one now next step is like oh yeah at the car was crashed whoa wait a second cars crashed I don't want to take two hundred and ten thousand dollars anymore this is where I can say sure you know what now you may be entitled today don't get a commission I don't get it you get two hundred and twenty thousand that's what the sale would have been two twenty-five you could try to squeeze it just for the PR aspect of it that that they'll pay you to twenty five for the car and then they'll eat whatever loss there is right that's not where they stopped this turned into like and this is why people hate retrieval at least why I hate certain rich people is that people look for this payday I've been wrong though I've been wrong come on you had a call you had a widget the widgets worth two hundred and twenty five thousand now forget what they were asking for like full retail guy who's been dreaming about that exact spec car forever that buyer doesn't really exist the car is worth just say 225 right you get you 225 you're good whether the car gets whether a guy lights it on fire whether guy pushes it off a cliff shouldn't make a difference so you can be made whole by somebody giving you 225 you feel tricked deceive that the car was crashed or whatever I get asking for the 225 asking for a million dollars pushing the like treble-damage claiming fraud and negligence you're not harmed your harm stops at receiving full payment for what you had at the dealer for sale right like I don't understand and and this is sort of like a touchy one I think this is gonna split the audience as far as like that was my car if that was my car if you're happy putting a car for sale and getting full value for it that's it you know now yes they're claiming negligence employees damaged cars it happens oh the guy was joyriding you don't know if the guy was joyriding guy could have been backing it up in the in the shop or something hit a pole I know that's not the situation here but like stuff happens like do you have employees at the dealership cars get damaged it's just what happens to then try to say like well that was negligence negligence is one of my least favorite words because anything where something happens it's very simple that was negligent well maybe it didn't crash it like it's negligent to crash like you clearly did something wrong because if you didn't do something wrong there would be no negligence and there wouldn't be a crack like that drives me nuts so claiming negligence claiming fraud is a different story claiming fraud is that the loss you could claim is that the car was worth 225 and they paid you 210 which you accepted but that $15,000 could be the fraud you were receiving less monetary compensation than value of your asset right so but even in any case no matter how it works whether the dealership takes three thousand five thousand ten thousand the dealership at the end of the day was buying a car for two hundred and ten thousand dollars that was arguably now worth even when repaired 195 200 whatever it's worth so they're paying more than the damn things worth and even with the accident on it before they pay to repair it may be worth 150 I don't know what the actual damage was I don't know any of those details but the fact that people now I'm getting a lawyer I'm suing I'm doing that our legal system stinks like for this to be a thing where were this guy and that we had this case where the other guy got paid whatever was half a million dollars I remember I did a video on it and it was just so like maddening and that these guys get these tremendous payouts it was a 430 that he got you know the manifolds are cracked and I remember this and he claimed fraud and this guy got 3x what the car was even worth so he got a free Ferrari and in several hundreds of thousands of dollars claiming or maybe even Millions I forgot what it was claiming that the dealership was negligent and they lied to him saying that it was sold and we took care of everything and they gave it to him and it wasn't everything taken care of mind-boggling to me like I just don't get it right like that stuff it really it really irks me like to claim that you are somehow harmed when selling something a I'll give you whatever like imagine you somebody buys a piece of art from you that you think is worth $500 it gives you $500 and it turns out there was a Picasso it's worth 40 million dollars you can't sue the guy you agreed to take $500 for the thing what like it's it's your job to either look it up but even if the guy gave you four hundred dollars instead of five hundred dollars you'd have a claim of a hundred the fact that you could take something and then claim all this negligence and fraud and then oh I don't know I can't trust a car dealership ever again it's very very like I don't know it just it just defines what is terrible about our legal system your damages should be capped at the value of the thing that was lost plus if you need legal fees if you have to chase after but like a dealership if you say like you give me that another fifteen grand or I'm gonna sue you deal he's not gonna spend fifteen thousand dollars in legal fees if they do want to spend fifteen thousand dollars on legal fees you sue them you get your fifteen thousand dollars and then you get your damages of whatever legal fees so that the dealership ends up having to pay thirty or forty thousand dollars instead of just right in the check for fifteen in advance that's the stuff I don't get I like I don't know like it's I get like emotional distress I get that stuff like if you do something and like yours like there's anxiety can't sleep etc etc like it impacts your life for a long time guy was selling a car and got paid for the car like it's not whether regardless of what happened behind the scenes I agree like the deal is probably should have just said like look the car was crashed but the dealership did sort of I mean I don't know if I would I'm not in that position but as a business it's like you broke somebody's thing just just go pay for it and we'll deal with it I don't know if it's relevant if somebody's selling something and you break it or you don't break it like to imagine you put something a piece of art for sale in a gallery and you know okay you know what you damage the art instead of saying hey we damage the art hey I got a buyer here's your check if you end up being the buyer who cares like and and the dealership has a completely different take on this this is they're trying to pretend like it's fraud and they negotiate it down and they're and and they they were claiming that there was a buyer but there wasn't a real buyer there very well could have been a buyer at two hundred and twenty thousand and the guy at the dealership crashed the car so now the dealer is like well I can't sell the buyer the car because it's now crashed but hey Joe we had a we have a buyer two hundred and twenty thousand our Commission's ten we'll give you a check for 210 you're good Joe says good that's it so now the dealership is at a disadvantage because they can't sell the car they got to fix it and resell it but they're giving this guy every penny that they were able to get and secure to sell that car and that was that was real money on that car that wasn't like significant where we got a buyer at one thirty the cars worth two twenty five it wasn't significantly below market value so I don't really get the claim that this guy is making I I do get it because people like lawyers love this a lawyer will do this on contingency all day long contingency means that the lawyer is going to say like look I'm you don't have to pay me a dollar I'm gonna go sue them and I'm gonna get thirty percent of whatever I win so that's that's where we're at and the lawyers love this because lawyers are pretty much the worst people on the planet even the lawyers like yeah yeah yeah yeah you signed a deal with the devil that's why you become a lawyer it sucks there's people there defending all these people that are that are clearly guilty but you know what Oh Jay got a defense lawyer because OJ is entitled to a defense and it's just one of those things that you know can't can't fix the world but I agree everybody is entitled to an event at defense they are entitled to be presumed innocent until proven guilty but at the end of the day to like hide evidence there's lawyers the foetus Doulos the guy who just tried to kill himself yesterday up in Connecticut killed his wife his lawyer is now being charged with helping cover up the murder I mean and then there's this big like a attorney-client privilege thing but at a certain point in time they they're rather unscrupulous the the guy avenatti same thing extorting and he's representing stormy Daniels like oh yeah the salt of the earth here and this guy's coming out and going after Nike and trying to extort them for 20 million dollars to do I'm gonna smear you it just shows you that these people are pretty bad news it's not all every lawyer there I'm sure some good lawyers out there maybe one good lawyer out there but most of them sort of staying I'm very happy I didn't follow my path I went to college pre-law and I'm very happy I jumped off that train early on but there you have it leave your comments and the thing below if it was your car they crashed it I would love it if I brought my car in for service and they pushed it off the lift and they're like all right here's a check for the value of your car great especially and that's nuts bringing a car in for service it's not even bringing a car in for for sale if I brought my car for sale I don't care who's writing to check the owner of the dealer the daughter the owner of the dealer I don't care who ends up with that car as long as I received the money and I'm willing to take on that car we got it you got a sale and that's where it should stop I think that's where the lawsuit should stop which hopefully judge if you're watching like this guy is entitled to to the 220 that the car was worth they you're entitled to every penny that the car is worth I don't think you're worth you're entitled to anything beyond that that's just me rob furedi giving you thoughts on this sucks to be the dealership it's more of a black eye and the dealership that they're trying to cover something up but again until I'm in like you know we don't know the actual details or the who knew why who like it just could be a manager scrambling to try to say face because it doesn't look good if you have a customer and it's like all my cars Christ this guy looks at it as an opportunity instead of just saying okay you know what thank you guys are doing the right thing they could easily say hey you make an insurance claim on your insurance that's a different story the the dealership was gonna make this right they attempted to make it right by giving this guy all the money for his car or whatever he was willing to accept for the car or completing the deal that wasn't able to be completed because the car was crashed and my eyes the dealership did what they had to do and I don't know it's it's tough it's like nobody wants to admit that they smashed up a customer's car and and that just complicates it so if you get the guy to agree to take the car if the guy refused to take anything else like I'm not taking less than 240 the dealership probably would have written the check for 240 I don't know I guarantee there's dealerships out there that damage cars and fix them and give them back to you before you even find out about it it's just the way the car world is I'm sorry just the way it is but Rob Freddie thank you for watching leave your comments and thoughts below if you have a Ferrari I still think you're OK to bring it to Ferrari of San Antonio to to consign it to sell it reputable Ferrari dealership I've never heard anything you're not talking about going to cars for cash down the street and crossing your fingers I think you'll be alright adios for those of you not familiar with my other company I started the company called adventure drives which combines driving and bucket list travel it's a lot of fun if you're interested prices can be done per person it's don't worry if you don't have somebody to go with you we can match you up with somebody you can check the link in the description for adventure drives comm and sign up todayall right everybody Rob for ready here and this is another good one everybody likes to look at my stories that I share and say like wow that guy's got the worst luck I don't really have the worst luck it's just the nature of the beast I've had employees damage and crash cars before it's just you know what happens well this time it happened to a Ferrari dealerships in San Antonio and that Ferrari being crashed by an employee ended up costing or is potentially gonna cost the dealership almost a million dollars or up to a million dollars because there's a lawsuit so here's what happened Texas businessman we'll just leave it at that I don't want to get into what he does or anything like that I don't think it's incredibly relevant for this but he is a guy who brought his 2014 458 Spyder to the dealership on consignment consignment means that you are giving your vehicle to the dealership to sell if the your dealership can't if they sell it they take a commission if they can't sell it they give it back the dealer is not buying it from you - then floor plan and sell it there legitimately putting a third party car in their showroom to attract the buyer - then take a piece of that transaction as it finishes now the story from the lawsuit is that the dealership got this car one of the guys in the dealership joy rode the car crashed it and then the dealership scrambled convinced the guy who owned the car to take less than he wanted to take and then reveal that the car was crashed after they were they agreed to a payout and then the guys like whoa whoa whoa I'm not accepting the payout and you and and they looked at that as an opportunity to squeeze the dealer right now they're claiming like fraud and negligence and I don't know if I necessarily agree here that this is sort of a little bit more open-and-shut than a million dollar lawsuit because whether or not the dealer acknowledged that the car was crashed that's like just bad business like hey your car was crashed but if you bring your car to the dealership for sale right yeah the emotional attachments over you're selling your car right I will take and they listed the car for two hundred and forty thousand which is retail 239 five hundred whatever it was two hundred forty thousand is every penny of a 2014 458 Spyder so right there you're trying to get retail assume the car sells to twenty five to twenty whatever it was they said they got a buyer at 220 and that the guy was going to agree to take 220 and receive 210 right so clearly like if you're agreeing to accept 210 thousand dollars for your car and you're happy with that whether the car is on fire at the bottom of a lake shouldn't really matter you've now accepted verbally or not that you're gonna take two hundred and ten thousand dollars for the car whether or not they like look I think this is a good that you've accepted to take two hundred and ten thousand dollars for your car let's just look at that's step one now next step is like oh yeah at the car was crashed whoa wait a second cars crashed I don't want to take two hundred and ten thousand dollars anymore this is where I can say sure you know what now you may be entitled today don't get a commission I don't get it you get two hundred and twenty thousand that's what the sale would have been two twenty-five you could try to squeeze it just for the PR aspect of it that that they'll pay you to twenty five for the car and then they'll eat whatever loss there is right that's not where they stopped this turned into like and this is why people hate retrieval at least why I hate certain rich people is that people look for this payday I've been wrong though I've been wrong come on you had a call you had a widget the widgets worth two hundred and twenty five thousand now forget what they were asking for like full retail guy who's been dreaming about that exact spec car forever that buyer doesn't really exist the car is worth just say 225 right you get you 225 you're good whether the car gets whether a guy lights it on fire whether guy pushes it off a cliff shouldn't make a difference so you can be made whole by somebody giving you 225 you feel tricked deceive that the car was crashed or whatever I get asking for the 225 asking for a million dollars pushing the like treble-damage claiming fraud and negligence you're not harmed your harm stops at receiving full payment for what you had at the dealer for sale right like I don't understand and and this is sort of like a touchy one I think this is gonna split the audience as far as like that was my car if that was my car if you're happy putting a car for sale and getting full value for it that's it you know now yes they're claiming negligence employees damaged cars it happens oh the guy was joyriding you don't know if the guy was joyriding guy could have been backing it up in the in the shop or something hit a pole I know that's not the situation here but like stuff happens like do you have employees at the dealership cars get damaged it's just what happens to then try to say like well that was negligence negligence is one of my least favorite words because anything where something happens it's very simple that was negligent well maybe it didn't crash it like it's negligent to crash like you clearly did something wrong because if you didn't do something wrong there would be no negligence and there wouldn't be a crack like that drives me nuts so claiming negligence claiming fraud is a different story claiming fraud is that the loss you could claim is that the car was worth 225 and they paid you 210 which you accepted but that $15,000 could be the fraud you were receiving less monetary compensation than value of your asset right so but even in any case no matter how it works whether the dealership takes three thousand five thousand ten thousand the dealership at the end of the day was buying a car for two hundred and ten thousand dollars that was arguably now worth even when repaired 195 200 whatever it's worth so they're paying more than the damn things worth and even with the accident on it before they pay to repair it may be worth 150 I don't know what the actual damage was I don't know any of those details but the fact that people now I'm getting a lawyer I'm suing I'm doing that our legal system stinks like for this to be a thing where were this guy and that we had this case where the other guy got paid whatever was half a million dollars I remember I did a video on it and it was just so like maddening and that these guys get these tremendous payouts it was a 430 that he got you know the manifolds are cracked and I remember this and he claimed fraud and this guy got 3x what the car was even worth so he got a free Ferrari and in several hundreds of thousands of dollars claiming or maybe even Millions I forgot what it was claiming that the dealership was negligent and they lied to him saying that it was sold and we took care of everything and they gave it to him and it wasn't everything taken care of mind-boggling to me like I just don't get it right like that stuff it really it really irks me like to claim that you are somehow harmed when selling something a I'll give you whatever like imagine you somebody buys a piece of art from you that you think is worth $500 it gives you $500 and it turns out there was a Picasso it's worth 40 million dollars you can't sue the guy you agreed to take $500 for the thing what like it's it's your job to either look it up but even if the guy gave you four hundred dollars instead of five hundred dollars you'd have a claim of a hundred the fact that you could take something and then claim all this negligence and fraud and then oh I don't know I can't trust a car dealership ever again it's very very like I don't know it just it just defines what is terrible about our legal system your damages should be capped at the value of the thing that was lost plus if you need legal fees if you have to chase after but like a dealership if you say like you give me that another fifteen grand or I'm gonna sue you deal he's not gonna spend fifteen thousand dollars in legal fees if they do want to spend fifteen thousand dollars on legal fees you sue them you get your fifteen thousand dollars and then you get your damages of whatever legal fees so that the dealership ends up having to pay thirty or forty thousand dollars instead of just right in the check for fifteen in advance that's the stuff I don't get I like I don't know like it's I get like emotional distress I get that stuff like if you do something and like yours like there's anxiety can't sleep etc etc like it impacts your life for a long time guy was selling a car and got paid for the car like it's not whether regardless of what happened behind the scenes I agree like the deal is probably should have just said like look the car was crashed but the dealership did sort of I mean I don't know if I would I'm not in that position but as a business it's like you broke somebody's thing just just go pay for it and we'll deal with it I don't know if it's relevant if somebody's selling something and you break it or you don't break it like to imagine you put something a piece of art for sale in a gallery and you know okay you know what you damage the art instead of saying hey we damage the art hey I got a buyer here's your check if you end up being the buyer who cares like and and the dealership has a completely different take on this this is they're trying to pretend like it's fraud and they negotiate it down and they're and and they they were claiming that there was a buyer but there wasn't a real buyer there very well could have been a buyer at two hundred and twenty thousand and the guy at the dealership crashed the car so now the dealer is like well I can't sell the buyer the car because it's now crashed but hey Joe we had a we have a buyer two hundred and twenty thousand our Commission's ten we'll give you a check for 210 you're good Joe says good that's it so now the dealership is at a disadvantage because they can't sell the car they got to fix it and resell it but they're giving this guy every penny that they were able to get and secure to sell that car and that was that was real money on that car that wasn't like significant where we got a buyer at one thirty the cars worth two twenty five it wasn't significantly below market value so I don't really get the claim that this guy is making I I do get it because people like lawyers love this a lawyer will do this on contingency all day long contingency means that the lawyer is going to say like look I'm you don't have to pay me a dollar I'm gonna go sue them and I'm gonna get thirty percent of whatever I win so that's that's where we're at and the lawyers love this because lawyers are pretty much the worst people on the planet even the lawyers like yeah yeah yeah yeah you signed a deal with the devil that's why you become a lawyer it sucks there's people there defending all these people that are that are clearly guilty but you know what Oh Jay got a defense lawyer because OJ is entitled to a defense and it's just one of those things that you know can't can't fix the world but I agree everybody is entitled to an event at defense they are entitled to be presumed innocent until proven guilty but at the end of the day to like hide evidence there's lawyers the foetus Doulos the guy who just tried to kill himself yesterday up in Connecticut killed his wife his lawyer is now being charged with helping cover up the murder I mean and then there's this big like a attorney-client privilege thing but at a certain point in time they they're rather unscrupulous the the guy avenatti same thing extorting and he's representing stormy Daniels like oh yeah the salt of the earth here and this guy's coming out and going after Nike and trying to extort them for 20 million dollars to do I'm gonna smear you it just shows you that these people are pretty bad news it's not all every lawyer there I'm sure some good lawyers out there maybe one good lawyer out there but most of them sort of staying I'm very happy I didn't follow my path I went to college pre-law and I'm very happy I jumped off that train early on but there you have it leave your comments and the thing below if it was your car they crashed it I would love it if I brought my car in for service and they pushed it off the lift and they're like all right here's a check for the value of your car great especially and that's nuts bringing a car in for service it's not even bringing a car in for for sale if I brought my car for sale I don't care who's writing to check the owner of the dealer the daughter the owner of the dealer I don't care who ends up with that car as long as I received the money and I'm willing to take on that car we got it you got a sale and that's where it should stop I think that's where the lawsuit should stop which hopefully judge if you're watching like this guy is entitled to to the 220 that the car was worth they you're entitled to every penny that the car is worth I don't think you're worth you're entitled to anything beyond that that's just me rob furedi giving you thoughts on this sucks to be the dealership it's more of a black eye and the dealership that they're trying to cover something up but again until I'm in like you know we don't know the actual details or the who knew why who like it just could be a manager scrambling to try to say face because it doesn't look good if you have a customer and it's like all my cars Christ this guy looks at it as an opportunity instead of just saying okay you know what thank you guys are doing the right thing they could easily say hey you make an insurance claim on your insurance that's a different story the the dealership was gonna make this right they attempted to make it right by giving this guy all the money for his car or whatever he was willing to accept for the car or completing the deal that wasn't able to be completed because the car was crashed and my eyes the dealership did what they had to do and I don't know it's it's tough it's like nobody wants to admit that they smashed up a customer's car and and that just complicates it so if you get the guy to agree to take the car if the guy refused to take anything else like I'm not taking less than 240 the dealership probably would have written the check for 240 I don't know I guarantee there's dealerships out there that damage cars and fix them and give them back to you before you even find out about it it's just the way the car world is I'm sorry just the way it is but Rob Freddie thank you for watching leave your comments and thoughts below if you have a Ferrari I still think you're OK to bring it to Ferrari of San Antonio to to consign it to sell it reputable Ferrari dealership I've never heard anything you're not talking about going to cars for cash down the street and crossing your fingers I think you'll be alright adios for those of you not familiar with my other company I started the company called adventure drives which combines driving and bucket list travel it's a lot of fun if you're interested prices can be done per person it's don't worry if you don't have somebody to go with you we can match you up with somebody you can check the link in the description for adventure drives comm and sign up today\n"