I tend to agree with
@a.void here. We all want a perfect car and we all expect Tesla to do the right thing. 99% of the time they do. However sometimes you get a car that is either damaged enough, or needs enough repair that it should never be sold as new. In my particular case, I will be getting my car delivered out of Cleveland/Lindhurst which has had a few issues (
Staggering amount of issues found at/after delivery. Considering returning the car.) and the DA/Body Shop people say it's "within tolerances" or get flippant about repairing issues. That's a case where I want to be able to refuse the car for one that is in proper "new" condition. Holding onto my money is the the best way I have of enforcing my right as a customer should a situation like this occur.
To be clear, I've done this every time I've purchased a car that wasn't already on the lot.