Tuesday, October 27, 2009

To car dealers: We purchased a new car on Feb 6, signed the contractpapers and promised to bring a p

down payment back to the dealer on Feb. 15. Kept our promise on Feb 15. Got to the dealership to hear the unexpected from the finance deposit, o we need more than this on the cashier%26#039;s check, (deposit amount is on the contract) and then they ask when can you bring the car back!!! On top of that said we did not approve you, but yet we have this contract from his company!!! Mind this, the finance guy did not take the cashier check with their name on it, and the amount is not a small amount on the check!!! We talked to the sales man who sold us the car on Feb. 16, he stated to sit tight til Feb. 18, which we still have not heard a word from anyone. Here we stand still with the new car and a large cashier check in the dealers name. What do we do?



To car dealers: We purchased a new car on Feb 6, signed the contractpapers and promised to bring a promised?

Tell them to fill the original agreement, or stick it and return your check when you return the car.



To car dealers: We purchased a new car on Feb 6, signed the contractpapers and promised to bring a promised?

If you have a contract, and they won%26#039;t honor it (and it%26#039;s legal, and it%26#039;s not conditional - like %26quot;subject to approval of financing%26quot;), talk to an attorney. The first consultation should be free. Ask if he can have their attorney contact him before he sues them for you. What you want is to walk into the dealership and tell the manager that if he wants his car back he can contact your attorney - and hand him your attorney%26#039;s card. Or he can accept your down payment and arrange the financing he contracted to arrange. If the contract isn%26#039;t subject to financing, and he can%26#039;t get you the financing in the contract - in most states that%26#039;s his problem. He has to accept the contract he signed and live with it. Some dealers will go so far as to fire the employee who signed the contract to not have to honor it (can you spell %26quot;sleaze%26quot;?) but most courts won%26#039;t accept it - an employer is responsible for contracts signed in his name by his employees.

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