I hope this is the right place, if not please feel free to move it.
As some of you know my 298 is for sale, I received a very low offer, countered, and the buyer gave me a not so much better offer. He has never bought a boat before so he wants to have every possible inspection/test done on the boat, which I completely understand and would expect from any buyer. Here is the thing, its bitter cold in Cleveland so I obviously need to wait until spring for the sea trial, and some of the inspections. I refused the buyers final offer and told him I thought I could do better once the spring fever hits. Plus I would hate to wait until the sea trial and have him find one thing he doesnt like and walk away without giving me a chance to repair. This could provide him an out and would screw me because I would have missed some key time to list the boat. He has offered to provide me a deposit to hold his offer, and would allow me to relist the boat as long as I give him first right to refusal on any offer I receive. Then, if by my launch date, I have not received a better offer I could either continue to refuse his offer and give him his deposit back, or could agree at the offer price and go forward with the inspections. My question is, how would I write this up so it is agreed upon and no one loses out? I am confident that the inspection will show no issues because I had it surveyed in 2009 with no issues and have replaced and serviced any item that would be worn, outdated or prone to break (i.e. bilge pumps, electronics, canvas, carpets etc.) Any suggestions? Is there something simple I am missing? the buyer seems to be accomodating and understanding on everything except the price.
_________________ 1999 298 Vista [color=#FF0000]Sold!!! twin Volvo 5.7GXI
Woody: Pour you a beer, Mr. Peterson? Norm: Alright, but stop me at one...make that one-thirty
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