Shipping damage happens all the time. I am friends with a guy who used to deliver cars from the railyard to dealerships on car haulers. Once the vehicles rolls off the truck o to dealer lots, the truck driver isn't liable for any damages. He talked about cars that had roofs almost ripped off, dropped off ramps screwing up fenders and rockers, scrapes/scratches. It happens more often than you think. And they don't pay those guys enough to care.I doubt it was damaged in shipping. Carfax reports are usually thru the dealer. They might have had a parking lot incident after delivery. As mentioned, if the rear corner of the bed was hit by backing up, or another vehicle hitting it, it could have been a dent or scratch around the tail light area, requiring the bed to be painted.
If Florida is a 3% state for disclosure, a $60k vehicle has an $1800 max repair.
I was purchasing a new 2016 car for my wife in 2017. The car was a left over and I got a great price on it. While they did the paperwork and cleanup, I went out to tell them not to put any dressing on the tires. It was night so they were detailing the car under fluorescent lights and I noticed the rear quarter was a different shade then the doors. I looked closer and found the rear was repainted. The dealer didn't disclose it so I cancelled the purchase. To make it right, they gave me a 2017 model for the same price.
You didn't read my first sentence very well. I'm fully aware that shipping damages happen all the time, but Carfax reports aren't generated from shipping damages. Once they are considered "delivered" to the dealer, that's when Carfax reports start. You said the same thing I did with your statement, "Once the vehicles rolls off the truck o to dealer lots, the truck driver isn't liable for any damages." That's why I said it probably happened by being backed up on the lot, or run into by another vehicle while already at the dealership. If the dealership doesn't have their own body shop, they send it offsite, and that's where the Carfax came from.Shipping damage happens all the time. I am friends with a guy who used to deliver cars from the railyard to dealerships on car haulers. Once the vehicles rolls off the truck o to dealer lots, the truck driver isn't liable for any damages. He talked about cars that had roofs almost ripped off, dropped off ramps screwing up fenders and rockers, scrapes/scratches. It happens more often than you think. And they don't pay those guys enough to care.
If damages happen in shipping, but the truck gets dropped off at dealer with damaged it is then in the dealer to repair it. Once those wheels hit the dealer lot off the car haulers, any damages are the responsibility of the dealers to fix, even if it happensled while being delivered.You didn't read my first sentence very well. I'm fully aware that shipping damages happen all the time, but Carfax reports aren't generated from shipping damages. Once they are considered "delivered" to the dealer, that's when Carfax reports start. You said the same thing I did with your statement, "Once the vehicles rolls off the truck o to dealer lots, the truck driver isn't liable for any damages." That's why I said it probably happened by being backed up on the lot, or run into by another vehicle while already at the dealership. If the dealership doesn't have their own body shop, they send it offsite, and that's where the Carfax came from.