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I bought a car last Saturday. When I signed the contract, the dealer told me my car is Subaru outback with 2 years 0% financing. It turns out it's different model and the financing term is changed into 5 years 7.9%, which are totally different from what I was told when I signed the contract. I have been driving this car for 3 days so far. I want to know whether it is possible that I can break the contract and return the car since they were dishonest. Please help me.

2006-08-02 16:03:28 · 7 answers · asked by aaronkuo2000 1 in Cars & Transportation Buying & Selling

7 answers

First of all, there is something very fishy about your story!
I can't understand how you could have signed contracts &/or legal documents with the big black blindfold on!

all of the documents that you signed had the vin# , year , make & model. Do these match the vehicle that you have had in your posession for 3 days?

Was the contract hand written, because if a finance computer printed the contracts, it is nearly impossible to enter a wrong year & model if the vin# is correct.

If the vehicle info on the contract DOES NOT match the vehicle in your driveway , then the contract is VOID.

Now, about your finance contract terms..
Again, were you blindfolded ?
Everything about your loan should have been printed in black & white on the contract.
the vehicle info
the term
the amount financed
the interest rate
the monthly payment
when your payments start
when your payments end
all dates & figures filled in
NO BLANKS

Do you know how to read?

2006-08-02 16:49:49 · answer #1 · answered by Vicky 7 · 2 0

you didn't ask to see the car before signing the contract? if that's the case, you messed up good.

I'm not a lawyer but the contract you signed was for one model of a Subaru and the car you received is not the model you signed for. so if you got a lawyer involved I'm willing to bet you could return the car.

what i read from this first article is that if you sign for one thing and receive another you can reject it

but then according to the second article you should have rejected it immediately.

2006-08-02 16:14:54 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Sometimes
It depends on the State you live in.
There is a "Bait & Switch" law in my home state that covers this.
Usually there is a legal help group at state and county court houses, where a legal aide can give you a quick answer to this type of question.
Otherwise see an Attorney.

I just had a thought....If you financed the car; they have also defrauded the lender, call the banker and get their opinion

Yours: Grumpy

2006-08-02 16:25:48 · answer #3 · answered by Grumpy 6 · 0 1

Look at the contract--is the year written in it wrong like a 2003 instead of 2004 if so that already is a breech contract.
You can take the car back and demand a refund on your deposit

2006-08-02 16:11:42 · answer #4 · answered by toody 2 · 0 0

it really is incredibly hardship-free for there to be a clause in those contracts that states the contract is void if she nonetheless fails a credit verify, and so on. The dealerships want to "lock human beings in" otherwise as right away as they could. they don't need to attend quite a few days for a credit verify and make someone come decrease back, supply them a danger to modify their thoughts, and so on. it really is only a difficulty contained in the contract. till you spouse has poor credit and is pursuing a vehicle she will't manage to pay for, she probably shouldn't complication about it. otherwise convinced, there is only about truly a clause in her contract wherein they could nonetheless negate it.

2016-11-27 22:07:19 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Go to the Better Business Bureau
http://www.bbb.com/

2006-08-02 16:54:10 · answer #6 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

NO

2006-08-02 16:10:59 · answer #7 · answered by russellmcmillen1947 4 · 0 0

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