Tarheelgarage
Well-known member
I'm not trying to stir the pot but he owes this guy the money regardless if he comes around or not. It's a question of integrity.
Yes sir, we both think alike on this matter...

I'm not trying to stir the pot but he owes this guy the money regardless if he comes around or not. It's a question of integrity.

Best advice in this thread. It happened to my nephew. His Cornwell guy went to jail. Then comes out and expected payment. Meanwhile my nephew was paying the new Cornwell guy.
He only has to pay his driver until told otherwise get and keep a receipt for future payments
if the driver sold his debt he is doing somthing wrong by taking the $
Don't forget that there is technically still a lien on the box. If you try to sell it, it could get repo'd from the recipient. I always call and check serial numbers before I buy a used box to make sure there isn't any money owed on it.
You track him down and pay him because YOU bought the box. He didn't just roll a tool box into your shop and tell you to pay up or else. YOU went on to his truck and YOU bought the box that YOU wanted to purchase. If you have to track him down and blow his phone up then that's what it takes, pay him off and dont do business with him anymore. For Christs sake, its no wonder tools cost so damn much off a tool truck!
They cost "so damn much" because we are paying the premium for American made tools in which Americans are paid livable wages. Plus the cost of the warranty. All of which I am okay with. Stop blaming it on a guy who, at this point, has done nothing wrong.
hes in the clear to do whatever he wants with the box in my opinion.
This is governed by the state's statute of limitations. For debts in Washington state it is 3 to 6 years.
Caution: even if he's not there to collect, the debt still accrues interest! I'd suggest pulling out your paperwork and reading it and contacting whoever holds the debt and getting it paid off.
Yes, he owes money but to whom?? The old dealer? The replacement dealer? To Cornwell Corp?? Or other?? It could be up to the bankruptcy court if the old dealer went **** up.
I wouldn't stick my neck out paying the debt until I was 100% sure it is to the correct legal entity in this situation.
(ex: if he pays the old dealer and later finds out the legal owner of the debt has been transferred to someone different then he's screwed!!)
If I were the OP I would assume the debt is owed but I'd lay low until the legal owner of the debt comes forward with all the legal documents. This should not be a guessing game!!!
i would agree that you should pay up. That said, i would be sure that you pay whoever officially owns your debt and document it well. If someone can't show you documentation that they own the debt, you should not pay it because the real owner of your debt may show up later.

You pay the interest up front when you buy the stuff really, a 500$ impact is really just $250 +/- with a bunch of interest and convenience wrapped up in it.