Yes. If you have not taken delivery of the vehicle, you can still back out of the deal.
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In Pennsylvania, a buyer's order only becomes consummated once the buyer has taken delivery of the vehicle. Not at the signing, but once the vehicle leaves the sellers property.
A dealer can not repo the vehicle. The dealer can howecer sue you to get the down payment money if he can prove you owe it.
If the car is financed through a bank, the bank is the only agency with authority to repossess the vehicle. The dealer, once paid by the bank, no longer has any claim to the vehicle.
Having worked for many years as the director of the finance department in an auto dealership, I can tell you with certainty that signing must accompany "delivery". That is, if you both signed AND drove off the lot -- OR -- signed AND had it delivered to your home, then you own it -- you might as well start paying the bill. If all you did was sign but never took delivery, then the dealer cannot legally force you to take the contract or vehicle. If the dealer attempts to "get funded" for the contract (get the money from the bank who is financing your vehicle), then all you have to do is simply call the bank and tell them you never took delivery of the vehicle -- they will pull the funding immediately. Furthermore, if the dealer is requiring you to sign another contract, this is illegal. You can re-sign if you want, but the first contract is legally binding (assuming you also took delivery).
You have to negotiate a new deal with the new car dealer as obviously the car you are trading in is not worth what it was before the damage. Contact the selling dealer.
Not unless there is some very special language in your purchase contract.
No, a dealer cannot change the contract after it has been signed.
Not if you signed the contract to purchase the vehicle, unless the dealer agrees to let you back out. If you have taken delivery of the vehicle and drove it off the lot it is now a used car and it belongs to you.
To my knowledge, "The right to recision" only exists (with a car dealer) if you were to complete your purchase off-sight, that is not on the automobile dealership's property. If you sign all of your papers at the dealership, there is no right of recision. However, if you signed all of your papers (at the dealership) and did not physically take "delivery" of the vehicle, that is left the vehicle at the dealer, the sale is not completed. The reverse however holds true too for the client. Let's say a client signs all of their loan documents on an automobile (at the dealership and is given copy's) and takes delivery of the vehicle; If the loan is then declined by the finance institution that the dealer may use, the dealer is bound to the contract and has to guarantee the loan. In other words, the dealer can't back out of the transaction either.
what is the MSRP on this vehicle what dealer has the vehicle
Dealer invoice is a term used to describe dealer cost of the vehicle.
It baffles me that you even got off the lot (assuming the intended purchase was from a dealer) with it in the first place sans said payment. However, it also depends on who/where you bought the vehicle from, what type it is, what sort of contract you signed (Provided you signed one.) Unfortunately, this isn't a yes or no answerable question, too many dependencies and factors to make it so cut and dry.