Of course anyone can break a contract. That is what the courts are for. They will enforce the contract as it was written unless there is some mitigating factors.
You cannot break a contract unless there is something that is documented wrong with the car and the dealership refuses to repair it. There is no provision for a change of mind, only a lemon law.
The car dealership did not sign my contract, is it still binding?
A dealership does not have a legal right to re-sign a contract once it has been signed. However, if there is an obvious typographical mistake in the contract, they may request to re-sign it.
Depends on the car dealership in itself and where the lady signed the contract from
"If you purchase a used vehicle in Nevada and then no longer want the vehicle can you return it to the dealership and rescind the contract?"
A car dealership can cancel a purchase if they haven't received the right amount of money to honor the contract. Otherwise, they can't cancel a contract that has already been signed.
after approved financing and signed contract, have had car 8 days, can a dealership take car back?
Technically, your legal agreement is with the car dealership, so any subsequent changes with your financing may be irrelevant to your contract unless your agreement was dependent upon acquisition of financing. You may have cancelled your loan but this doesn't directly translate to cancellation of the contract you signed with the dealership. They won't give you the car with a balance due, but you may be subject to fines/penalties, it all depends upon the contract and the dealership. Review your contract terms and try to work with the dealership to resolve the issue.
A legal contract is binding. If you break the contract without having the legal right to do so as set in the terms of the contract or by having the contract declared void by a court, the other party has the right to sue you in order to be compensated for the value of the contract.
No one has such a contract to begin with,
Not unless the dealer agrees to void the contract or fraud was involved. You signed it, and you will have to live with that decision.
Depends on what the contract states.