If the bank won't give you the loan for this vehicle. If your credit history is not good. You can sign all the contracts you like, but they will check out that person's credit history. If your credit is good then I would discuss this with the Manager at the used car dealership. If you went to a banking institution for this loan then contact the bank you were dealing with to see why you didn't get the loan.
Refuse and demand your rebate. You signed a contract that not only you have to live with but so does the dealer. The contract works both ways and all you have to do is say NO!
you show proof it was canceled back then!
yes you can not
no
The dealer typically never signs the contract when the customer does. The dealer principal does quite often. Sorry this is not a loophole, its still a binding contract. However if you signed an open contract where it doesn't say what bank anywhere on the contract its assigned to then a very good lawyer can help you. Sometimes dealers can have you sign a contact without getting an approval from a bank first so they can leave that part out for them to hand write it in later.
The question is a bit confusing. When purchasing a car from a dealership, the transaction is by contract. Once the contract is signed, the contracted price is the price. There is no changing of minds later. If, as is not unusual, the dealer sent you with the vehicle to return at a later date to sign the contract, and then changed the price, this could be an attempt at fraud. Get the change in writing, do not sign anything, and take your evidence directly to an attorney who specializes in consumer fraud.
The car dealership keeps the contract. However, since the car dealer gets paid by its financier to have fully paid for the car, then the financier keeps the contract and later gives it the car owner upon final payments have been completed by the owner buyer.
If you signed the loan documents without reading them and later learned that you were on the loan alone, there is very little you can do. Your should have read before signing. If the loan was changed after you signed the documents, someone must have forged your signature on the altered documents. Then the loan is fraudulent. You may have to involve the police and go to court, however.
On the official Mercury insurance website and at their office. It is advisable to read consumer reviews before you make any decision and regret signing the contract later.
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If it is a used vehicle in South Dakota, and the contract states that you bought it "as is", you can not return the vehicle. Unless you were somehow misled as to the deal, the vehicle, or the contract, and can prove it, you can not return the vehicle.
What do they want to change about the contract?