Tradesman dispute

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LeftmostAardvark

Original Poster:

1,434 posts

164 months

Wednesday 22nd October 2014
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Hello,

I've walked in from work today into a bit of a SNAFU. My retired mum has asked a roofer (recommended by a local supplier), to fit a skylight and he quoted her verbally 'a couple of hundred'. She agreed and he's done most of the work, although there is some remedial work need doing (broken handle).

As he left a couple of days ago, he finally responded to her fourth 'exactly how much' question with £490 and he wants a cheque for the window as well, so he can pay the supplier directly,

She (and I) is obviously really upset about this - £490 is not 'a couple of hundred', so I'd like to know the best way forward - my first thought is to pay the supplier directly for the physical skylight and sending a 'final offer of £250, or I'll see you in court letter' to the roofer.

Am I right to do this, and how best should I go about it? I realise I should have kept a closer eye and made sure there were written quotes in place, but I'd assumed I've was straight up as he was recommended to me by a (good) local company.

Many thanks,

LeftmostAardvark

Original Poster:

1,434 posts

164 months

Wednesday 22nd October 2014
quotequote all
roofer said:
Put some pics up, let's see if the jobs worth paying for first...
I'll try and get round tomorrow to take photos, it is pitch dark now, I'm a few miles away and I have to get the kids to bed, but thanks for the offer.

LeftmostAardvark

Original Poster:

1,434 posts

164 months

Wednesday 22nd October 2014
quotequote all
R1 Indy said:
Did your mother agree to go ahead with the roofer either on the phone, or at your mothers house?

If so it would be either a distance contract or an off premises contract.

Unless he got your mother to sign away this right, she would be entitled to a 14 day cooling off period?

Although I'd imagine he would leave you with a hole in the roof!


This is a new reg that came in this July, I learned it the hard way, as the tradesman.

http://www.tradingstandards.gov.uk/cgi-bin/glos/co...

I think that is the right part.


Although if it was a fair price, and good workmanship I would just pay up.
It was done over the phone initially, she agreed and he turned up a couple of weeks later and did the work. No paperwork of any sort rolleyes

Not looking to screw him, but neither am I looking for him to more than double the price. He quoted a couple of hundred, he didn't do anything 'extra', and he batted off repeated requests throughout the work to confirm final price, with 'we're not expensive' and other such phrases (found this out tonight tbh). If I have to suck this up (she can't, not got a very high income), it'll set me back financially as I'm in the middle of a career change, so am pretty skint too.

LeftmostAardvark

Original Poster:

1,434 posts

164 months

Wednesday 22nd October 2014
quotequote all
J18NHS said:
£490 sounds about right, pay the man

I'd of quoted £600 then amended the quote if it was straight forward and charged you £500, that way you feel like you got a good deal and wouldn't be on here trying to fleece the bloke out of cash he's grafted for!
For single skylight, no scaffolding, no ladders, one day work? If it is legit, I'll suppose I'll have to find a way to pay, but I know she would not have gone ahead with it if he'd quoted £490.

Oh well, I'll take the contracting arrangements off her as sensitively as I can going forward.

LeftmostAardvark

Original Poster:

1,434 posts

164 months

Wednesday 22nd October 2014
quotequote all
Breadvan72 said:
The Regulations referred to above do not confer a right to cancel if the goods are made to customer specification or personalised, and do not apply to urgent repairs. It is not clear whether these exceptions apply here, as the OP has only given brief details.
Window was ordered in from supplier, so they probably don't apply. Anyway. It is looking increasingly likely that I'll need to stump the remaining cash up somehow. Thanks for the advice everyone.

LeftmostAardvark

Original Poster:

1,434 posts

164 months

Wednesday 22nd October 2014
quotequote all
LeftmostAardvark said:
For single skylight, no scaffolding, no ladders, one day work? If it is legit, I'll suppose I'll have to find a way to pay, but I know she would not have gone ahead with it if he'd quoted £490.

Oh well, I'll take the contracting arrangements off her as sensitively as I can going forward.
Oh, and I realised I wasn't clear - £490 was just for the fitting, the window price was on top of that (about £300).

LeftmostAardvark

Original Poster:

1,434 posts

164 months

Thursday 23rd October 2014
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bodhi808 said:
Add in some consumables and £190 sounds about right and we know that the window is £300.
Nowhere in the OP's posts does it mention that he has spoken to the tradesman himself, it sounds like all of his info is second hand from his mother from my reading of it. So in light of the uncanny sums involved, I'm asking is he 100% sure that the £490 bill is just for the days labour? Has he spoken to the guy and got it from the horses mouth so to speak?
Not yet, but i will do. As I understand it, it is £490 and a request for a separate cheque for circa £300 to pay supplier. I'll be following this up to make very sure I know what is going on though. Thanks for all advice everyone.

LeftmostAardvark

Original Poster:

1,434 posts

164 months

Sunday 26th October 2014
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Just to bump this again as I've managed to get down there and see what was done. He is popping back during the week at some point so I'm going to make sure I'm there and keep an eye on things.

LeftmostAardvark

Original Poster:

1,434 posts

164 months

Sunday 26th October 2014
quotequote all


Sorry for poor image qual - cheapy camera phone