Call a local attorney for state specific advice.
As soon as the vehicle is paid in full.
a dealer should have a bond. The coverage on the vehicle is like having a liability policy. If the dealer was driving the car and had an at fault accident, he will have to pay for repairs on his vehicle and the bond will cover the other persons car. Once you buy a car from a dealer, you are responsible for purchasing insurance for the vehicle, the dealer is no longer liable. In fact, the dealer should require that you have insurance before you drive the vehicle off the lot.
Not sure what the time limit(if any) is. CALL a local attorney ASAP. I have read of dealers getting caught NOT paying off loans yet selling cars again. It could be an honest mistake/oversight, no need to get stuck. Make the call just in case.
The vehicle can be sold as new as long as it has not been titled.
Why would a dealer ask for a car back? If you are referring to how long he has to repossess the vehicle after you stop making payments, the answer in most states is immediately.
If you've ridden it at all, you are at the mercy of the dealer. A quad is not a "vehicle", and you do not enjoy any protection from lemon laws.
10 days or they have to notifiy you in writing that they have not acquired financing.
Look at your rental agreement. It spells it out.
You cannot return it. The buyers remorse law does not apply to the purchase of a new or used vehicle.
30 days, I believe (with temporary tags from Dealer)
You cannot return a car you bought. It is a myth that the Buyers Remorse Law applies to the purchase of a vehicle. It does not.
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