The vehicle can be sold as new as long as it has not been titled.
If the deal has been approved by a lender and you have signed paperwork and then driven the veicle off the lot they can not unwind the deal. Their mistake they have to eat it if you are delivered in the vehicle. Unless you signed something giving them recourse (usually dealers have forms for salvage title vehicles that allow them to unwind the deal if they discover salvage/branded title)If they just misbooked the trade and made the mistake it's their problem. As long as you didn't misrepresent the trade you should be fine.
If the deal has been approved by a lender and you have signed paperwork and then driven the veicle off the lot they can not unwind the deal. Their mistake they have to eat it if you are delivered in the vehicle. Unless you signed something giving them recourse (usually dealers have forms for salvage title vehicles that allow them to unwind the deal if they discover salvage/branded title)If they just misbooked the trade and made the mistake it's their problem. As long as you didn't misrepresent the trade you should be fine.
When you find out..I would love to know. I bought a vehicle in Phoenix from Chapman. They didn't disclose it had been wrecked . They bought it back...but I lost sales tax. They wouldn't unwind the deal...I live in TX.
The correct spelling is "unwind".
Anemo is the prefix! You all should know that!!
The opposite of rewind is unwind.
Unwound is the past participle of unwind.
Unwind was created on 2001-03-06.
Unwind - novel - was created in 2007.
No, the word unwind is a verb, a word for an action (unwind, unwinds, unwinding, unwound). Example sentence: When I try to unwind the ribbon from the spool, I end up with a tangled mess.
Yes, the word unwind is a verb, a word for an action (unwind, unwinds, unwinding, unwound). Example sentence: When I try to unwind the ribbon from the spool, I end up with a tangled mess.
it is unwinded