Fundamentally, a seller does not have to give a refund if it is a final sale. However, if there is fraud or other conditions, legally they may have to.
Not unless the seller agrees to refund your money. A used car purchase is final.
it is the final price or total amount that you ought to pay to a company or person.(usually find invoice on Ebay)
invoice
A mandate is a person who buys coal. This person is either a trader or a final burner. The mandate is the person who has the power of buying or selling coal. There are two types: buyer's mandate or seller's mandate.
Usually, yes. That's often why the seller specifies that the sale is final.
paid invoice was the answer for Mar 13 2008
Absolutely, unless all sales are final.
"Pro forma" (Latin "as a matter of form") invoice is a preliminary document used to declare the value of the trade. It can be issued before the transaction to facilitate customs and payment arrangements. This document models the final commercial invoice, and may look just like the commercial invoice except for the Pro forma invoice heading, but can also omit minor details. None. Performa is simply an incorrect spelling/pronunciation of Proforma. Proforma is the correct term.
The Seller would like to obtain $300.00 dollars, quid, euros; whatever the unit of currency implied but if say, for instance, that only 4 or 5 people showed interest in the item .... one person offers $1, another offered $75, etc etc and the final person ( order doesn't matter) offers the seller $264.35 and the seller accepts ... then the person OFFERING $264.35 has made " the best offer " .... Hope that helps ... offered by Franklelandjohnson PS if a seller says " or best offer " it generally implies that he is willing to take less than the asking price .... otherwise he/she might say $300.00 FIRM ...
* A new car's invoice price is the manufacturer's initial charge to the dealer. Keep in mind that the invoice price also has a little bit of profit for the dealer called dealer hold back This is usually higher than the dealer's final cost because dealers receive rebates, allowances, discounts, and incentive awards. Generally, the invoice price should include freight (also known as destination and delivery). If you're buying a new car based on the invoice price (for example, "at invoice," "$100 below invoice," "two percent above invoice"), and if freight is already included, make sure freight isn't added again to the sales contract. * The invoice price is what the dealership is listed as paying before they get any of their discounts. You can check out the invoice price from websites, and when you buy a car you should shoot for around this price. If you pay MSRP on a car without anything added for free, you're paying too much (unless it's a Saturn, Scion, or hot car like a Prius)
no.you are only paying the amount it say on the screen
A seller may not refuse final payment in an attempt to repossess.