VW Service Centre hit my car
First post here and looking for some advice. I'll try keep the story as short as possible.
I had my car serviced at VW on Tuesday. Went to pick it up and found it kissing the rear end of a Tarago. Damage to the front bumper and sensors. They were very helpful and advised they will be bearing the costs of repair.
Today they called and said that after checking the video footage they could see that the mechanic parked the car fine at first, then it later rolled forward (when I picked up the car on Tuesday the e-brake was disengaged but selector was in park). Now they are telling me that there is a problem with the transmission and that I'm liable...
I always engage the parking brake before I leave my car, so I can't say with absolute certainty that this problem didn't exist prior to handing the car over for service, however I believe it's more likely that this "transmission problem" arose after my car was left with the parking brake off. It was parked on a slight decline which would have placed extra pressure on the parking pawl, and considering it's the only thing stopping the car from rolling now, it makes sense to me that the transmission issue arose around this time.
I'm no expert with DSGs (or traditional autos for that matter), but it's common sense to engage the parking brake along with putting the selector in park regardless of how flat the surface is. It's written in the bloody manual.
I was seeking direct compensation (before they told me about the transmission thing) because it has genuinely affected my work and mood (which again affects my work) but they're pushing back hard. Nothing I didn't expect, but now they're trying to put the blame on me for the broken transmission as well so the inconvenience has grown. I'll be fighting this with them to get the direct compensation, as well as the transmission work done on their dollar.
If there's any knowledge or information around DSGs, parking brakes, VWs rolling, etc. that you can share I'd greatly appreciate it. I don't think it's fair for them to 'win'. The service manager has claimed that he is going above and beyond to make good of the inconvenience caused by fixing the car and giving a loan car. That is standard procedure in all insurance claims. It's not okay for him to be leveraging that as a mode of compensation.
I drive a 2014 Golf 90kw 1.4TSI
Apologies if this post isn't in the right space - I've only just joined.
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