English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

My son paid $1500 dn. on a car Thursday or Friday and his pregnant wife was stopped immediately by the police-they thought she was someone else obviously-the dealership said the police were always stopping their cars. Then she started getting alot of attention from peculiar looking people (who appeared to be involved in drugs)We don't know who owned the car previously and carfax charges for their results.

2006-08-06 16:08:26 · 5 answers · asked by rapture 1 in Cars & Transportation Buying & Selling

5 answers

There is NO right to return a car because you changed your mind.

There is NO right to return a car because you changed your mind.

There is NO right to return a car because you changed your mind.

I can not say this enough!!!

The 72 hours rule that everyone keeps talking about applies to in home sales. It does not apply when you go to a "normal place of business". It was designed to prevent people from being pressured into signing contracts just to get the salesman to leave their home. When you go to a place of business, you always have the option of walking out. You can not walk out of a sales situation in your own home.

When you take delivery of a vehicle, and drive it off the dealers lot, you own it!! The dealer is not required to take it back, and most likely will not. If he does, you will have to buy another vehicle from him, because he is not going to refund your money.

2006-08-06 17:13:20 · answer #1 · answered by fire4511 7 · 1 0

No, there's no such law. And there's no 30 day law either. Common misconception. Unless your contract explicitly states that you may return the car within a certain period, you have no such right of cancellation.

At least one state has a mandatory warranty law (CT) and many states stipulate that a vehicle sold through a dealer must pass that state's safety and emissions inspections. In rare cases these laws can permit the buyer to void the contract but there is no "cooling off" period once you've taken delivery.

Some dealerships advertise a return period if you don't like the vehicle (Chrysler is running a promotion right now) but read the fine print carefully! There are significant restrictions and fees involved in these programs. In Chrysler's case, they charge a 5% restocking fee plus .50 per mile driven. That would be $1,500.00 if you drove a $20,000.00 car for 1000 miles and then returned it within 30 days. Not such a hot deal!

A Carfax report would not have identified the previous owner(s) but usually does reveal evidence of odometer tampering or any clouds on the title. There is a small charge, but I'd never buy any used car without a Carfax report. Virtually every dealership has a Carfax account and they can provide you with a copy. Most dealers don't charge for this service. Even if they do, it's dirt-cheap insurance!

2006-08-06 16:50:37 · answer #2 · answered by Bostonian In MO 7 · 0 0

Yes! there's a very stressful guy at my paintings and every body hates him. I've consistently defended him pronouncing he is simply kinda goofy, seeking to be humorous. One day he bought stuck taking sixty greenbacks from my coworker, for the reason that then I do not see him as goofy. He even performed a music at the jukebox that I normallylike. ButI didn'tenjoy such a lot when you consider that he's the one who performed it. (I'm a bartender) Once you understand what you understand, it is going to consistently be behind your brain.

2016-08-28 11:38:05 · answer #3 · answered by pointdexter 4 · 0 0

Call the local Better Business Bureau

Laws are different from state to state and city to city even.

2006-08-06 16:18:49 · answer #4 · answered by MrPurrfect 5 · 0 0

actually ther is a 30 day law in the us if you dont like it or there is something wrong. the car lot pays for it or you can get your car back

2006-08-06 16:15:23 · answer #5 · answered by applejack80@sbcglobal.net 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers