If you have not driven off the lot with the vehicle and have not turned over the title for trade there is no deal. They still have the vehicle you agreed to buy, and the bank has to approve the loan which has not been done either.
That will depend on the state and local laws, the purchase agreement, and the dealer itself.That will depend on the state and local laws, the purchase agreement, and the dealer itself.
If you have not signed a purchase agreement, yes. If you have signed, ask the dealer if you can back out. If the car has already been put in your name or you have driven it home, it is yours.
If you did not sign anything, yes. If you have signed some papers, depending on what they are, probably not. If you have signed the agreement to purchase, possibly. Ask the selling dealer to let you out of the agreement to purchase.
In Massachusetts, a car dealer's license requirements include a zoning application for,. articles of organization, and franchise agreements. It also includes purchase and sale agreement, lease agreement, and worker's compensation insurance affidavit.
Look at your rental agreement. It spells it out.
If you have not signed a contract to purchase the vehicle then yes you can walk away. If however you have signed a purchase agreement, then you had better ask the dealer very nicely if you can get out of the contract.
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.
That would depend on your purchase agreement. If you have no reason to take it back, you would be at the mercy of the dealer. If something goes wrong with it immediately, the dealer should either fix it or take it back. Usually the dealer will give you some kind of written warranty, but even without that, there is an implied warranty of fitness.
A check given to the dealership will be cashed. This is normal in business. Whether they can keep the money or have to return it is based on what your purchase agreement reads. Where I live if the purchase agreement has "Subject to financing" on it the down payment must be returned if the dealer can not get you financing and you can't get outside financing. If it does not have that in it they get to keep the money.
depends on your contract agreement and if it was under warranty. most likely you can return it if you talk to the dealer.
A good faith agreement is an agreement that is based off both parties honestly and sincerely trying to deal with each other. An example of this is should you purchase a car from a personal dealer and later come to find it was stolen you bought the car on good faith that it was in fact a legitimate person and you can't be held accountable.
at a nissanshpo dealer. at a nissanshpo dealer.