What do you mean "cancel." If you pay it off, they'll be as happy as clams. If you simply stop paying - they'll tak you to court and re-possess whatever it is you financed with them.
No.
Yes.
Not all agreements are the same, so you have to read your agreement. Some agreements specify a penalty for cancellation, others don't. If your agreement has no such clause, then you are free to cancel.
The following represent the few situations in which a car salesman may choose not to honor a signed finance contract: * Customer provided false or misleading information in order to acquire the loan (therefore, the car salesman may cancel the contract) * Car salesman provided false or misleading information to the customer (therefore, the car salesman's manager may cancel the contract)
No
It depends upon the specific terms and conditions of the contract. If the contract simply states it is the buyer's obligation to secure financing, then you can NOTcancel the contract. If the contract states that the agreement is conditional upon the buyer's ability to secure a loan, then you CAN cancel the contract.
Not unless it was an unsolicited sale.
The only time the purchaser can cancel auto financing is in the begining of the loan during the "interview" with the finance company. That is one of the reasons the dealership will not tell you who the finance company is before they get "funded" by the bank. If you knew who the finance company was before the dealership gets funded then you can cancel the financing. The other issue you have is the contract signed with the dealership. They can still say they will be the bank and stick you with the car and the financing.
Yes, with the agreement of the finance company.
You cannot return a car half way through a finance agreement without penalties. This is because it causes the owner a lot of stress.
Santoña Agreement happened in 1937.
This can happen, and is perfectly legal, in part because a verbal agreement is nonbinding. However, you then have the right not to sign the lease and to cancel the entire matter if you find that the rent is not reasonable.