check into a "Insurance Bond" this is a Insurance issued from a Bond Company that insures the Title and ownership. You bring a letter with you that you write explaining why you have no title, the bond is issued, and cost of bond is determined by the price you paid for the car, last time I had to do this, it was something like 5% of the price paid for the car. you take the bond to the DMV, Department of Motor Vehicles, and you should get a new title. Secondly, in most states the dealer is required to send title within a 30 day period, if this does not happen for whatever reason, the DMV usually gives you a new Temp tag extending your temporary expiration limit. You can call the Dealer Licensing Board with your predicament as well for suggestions. But in the End a Insurance Bond may be the only option
you might be screwed . . . any decent dealer will tell you upfront that you signed is on the condition that the bank accepts evrything, when I've bought a car before my dealer even has a disclamer to sign saying they have told me that.
Look at the paperwork you signed regarding the lone.
if you purchase a vehicle, and the title was signed over to you, you must title it at your local dmv before you can sell it, unless you are a licensed vehicle wholesaler or a dealer. If you are selling it, you do not have to register it, but you do have to title it.
There is no return period unless the dealer has such a voluntary, user friendly policy. Most car sales are final. You need to read your contract and know the dealer's policies before signing anything.
You can't change your mind. Once you signed for it, you bought it. Your only chance is if the dealer is willing to take it back.
Depending on the contract and the terms that you agreed to. Talk to your dealer to point it out on your contract that YOU signed. There is NO cooling off period on the purchase of an automobile unless the dealer agrees to it. Legally you bought the car and you own it. If you bought it new, it is now a used car and worth allot less than the day you bought it.
Hi, I think they are prints, but I have bought them before and they are great quality and a good price :)
The Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come was the one who signed the register at Marley's burial in "A Christmas Carol".
Yes.
Address Register are designed to make it easy to index into the array of constant register. The address allows you to provide a signed integer offset into the constant register.
Once you and the dealer have signed the contract, it is a binding contract agreement and it responsible by law. You can take him to court if he doesn't keep his part of the agreement.
I bought a buick reagal but when I sign for the loan, the amount i was promised was more on the cost. i didn't see this till i looked over the loan aggreement what rights do i have