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Why would the dealer want it back. You bought it, and it is now your car. Remember, buyer beware.
Contracts generally need two signatory parties.
In Pennsylvania, a buyer's order only becomes consummated once the buyer has taken delivery of the vehicle. Not at the signing, but once the vehicle leaves the sellers property.
No the dealership is under no obligation to allow a consumer to return the car. Once the contract is signed the car has a new owner and belongs to the buyer.
most definatly, and don't let the new company tell you otherwise.
If the selling dealer pays for some repairs on a car you bought "AS IS" then count yourself lucky that the dealer went above and beyond what he legally was required to do. If you are trying to get out of the contract on this technicality then you did not deserve the fair treatment the seller gave you. No court would ever void the contract because the seller helped you when he did not have to.
One location is AutoAnything. This is a website that sells auto parts. Another website is CARID. Of course, the buyer could also visit his or her local Dodge dealer or Used Auto Parts dealer.
In the state of Georgia there is no grace period after buying a used car. Once the contract is signed the car belongs to the buyer and they cannot change their mind.
A coffin.
The buyer has the right to surrender the vehicle before he picks it up. Or pay for it.
Right up until the point when the contract is signed, the buyer can change his or her mind, and what the co-buyer thinks about it is an issue for the two of them to work out. After the contract is signed, it's pretty much too bad for the buyer if he or she has "second thoughts".
Unless the dealer provided a warranty, I don't think the dealer would be responsible. Not always, but usually, a buyer is responsible for determining the acceptable condition of an item which he or she is buying.