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.
I would contact the dealer because it could be a mistake
Sure the dealer can ask for more money and you can refuse. Tell them a deal is a deal, and you expect them to honor the contract they signed. You payed them and hopefully you are in possession of the car. If so, I see nothing they can do, until you come back for service. Then they may try to recoup their loss. So be aware of that. If they made an honest mistake and it is very little money I would make it right if it were me. But legally I think you do not have to. Your decision.
A used car contract can be changed if the dealer messed up the paperwork depending on the type of mistake made on the sale. In some cases you will need to provide proof that a mistake was made and take this to court.
Probably not. They wrote and signed it, they are bound by it too.
The dealer will pay off the loan but it t will cost you a fortune by a low tradein price and the dealer refinancing the original loan payoff. Don't do it. You can come out much better by finding a buyer yourself and paying off the loan with some of the proceeds. You are in a much better position to make a better deal or get a discount on the next car you want with more cash in your pocket. This can be a big bucks difference depending on the value of your car and the amount you owe.
What are you expecting us to say? That you can keep it? You know the right thing to do you greedy dishonest loser
There is no documented evidence of a minting flaw in the "Festival of Britain" Crown, but it is possible. A reputable coin dealer will be able to advise.
I think you might have made a mistake and you might have meant sell. All you have to do is get hooked up with a car dealer and ka-bam! There you have your answer
The dealer cannot take the car back legally. It is their mistake and they will have to absorb the costs or mistakes that they made in the paperwork.
You're screwed. You fell for the oldest trick in the book. You pay for what ever is on that contract, not for what he said.
you can talk to the used car dealer, and bring up the issue KINDLY, and inform him/her that there was a mistake somewhere along the line, and you felt misled. from there, it goes by what he/she and you say.