no
There is usually not a cost difference between the provider and the dealer. Check both places before placing an order. Yes, a cell phone dealer will charge more than a cell provider. This is because with a cell provider you will likely sign or be on a contract with them where they will make the full price of the phone eventually.
No, a Signed contract is Legally binding, you would need permission from a courthouse to modify any such contract.
You cannot get out of a contract unless the dealer lets you out. Just because you haven't taken delivery, doesn't mean you aren't liable for the terms of the contract.
If the car that the dealer delivers is not the car that is identified in the contract, then the DEALER is in default, not you.
If the contract of the warranties is expired, then the car owner would be charge for the repair in the car.
It depends on the laws in your state, and the exact problem(s) you are having with the dealer and the car.
Once you and the dealer have signed the contract, it is a binding contract agreement and it responsible by law. You can take him to court if he doesn't keep his part of the agreement.
Here is another tip. This one is from a peer-reviewed article.Pass Through of Tax--tax inventory feeWhile VIT is actually one component of the dealer's ad valorem tax, state law allows dealers to pass on to retail buyers the unit tax attributable to that sale. The charge on a retail contract for the tax should be disclosed as "dealer inventory tax" and not misrepresented as a charge required by law or as the "buyer's inventory tax." While the VIT charge can be passed on to buyers, the law does not require that a dealer do so. In fact, the law is neutral on the issue, and an attempt to convince a buyer that the tax is a mandatory charge required by law to be added to the contract is incorrect and actionable.Addition of the tax on the contract is a negotiable item and a dealer can refuse to sell to a buyer who refuses to have it included. Conversely, a buyer can refuse to sign a contract that has it in. you will pay interest on this fee if you are financing.Documentary Fee---the dealership cannot charge you this fee. It is not a mandatory fee to pay to the dealership. Not only that, if you finance a vehicle, you will be paying some interest on that small fee as well.
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.
Probably not. They wrote and signed it, they are bound by it too.
The car dealership did not sign my contract, is it still binding?
The dealer cannot take the car back legally. It is their mistake and they will have to absorb the costs or mistakes that they made in the paperwork.