Ok So on July 20, 2007 i Bought a Nissan Altima 2.5 S 2005 For 18G's Total Price. I was Told I was going to pay 236 for 12 months then pay 336. The dealer said he would give us our contract by mail yet we still have not recieved it but we have recieved our payment book. The Book was $369 x 77 months. The Total was almost $30,000. The guy that sold us the car is on vacation and when we went everybody at NORTH PLAINFIELD NISSAN ROUTE 22 said no 1 can help but car seller himself. He Unfurtonatly is On VACATION and comes back this Sat. What should i do because one i dont have a copy of the contract, and im not going to pay $30,000 for a 50,000 mile car. 30 days end in 1 day so he wont be back. What SHould I Do??????????????
2007-08-19
16:13:36
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8 answers
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asked by
Anonymous
in
Politics & Government
➔ Law & Ethics
I would go back into the dealership and DEMAND to speak with a sales manager. Insist that they provide you with a copy of the contract you signed. Car dealerships try to make you talk to the salesman for everything when in reality this sounds like something that a manager needs to deal with.
2007-08-19 16:22:44
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answer #1
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answered by jcn 4
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Take the car back. If you don't have a contract in hand then you don't have a car. You get pulled over by a cop you are going to have a difficult time convincing the cop that the car is yours.
The General Sales Manager or the Finance Manager at the dealership are the people you want to talk to not the salesman. So the BS about only the salesman helping you is just that, BS. Have someone follow you down to the dealership and drop the Nissan off then tell the dealership to stick it. Then file a complaint with your Motor Vehicle Enforcement Division and Nissan Customer Service. Maybe even find a good consumer rights attorney. Especially if the dealership threatens to put this on your credit. Lemonlaw.com might be able to help you on that.
Use www.carbuyingtips.com and Edmunds.com to get a good deal on a new or used vehicle.
FYI: When buying a car you ALWAYS ALWAYS ALWAYS negotiate price, not payment. Not doing this could be a very expensive mistake.
2007-08-19 16:33:44
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Do you have title of ownership to car, or are you driving what would appear to be a stolen car?
These people SAYING no one can resolve this other than the guy on vacation ... get something from them IN WRITING with their signature about this, so they can't take it back later.
Write out first check without the coupon, and take that to the top boss of the Nissan company & demand a receipt.
Write a letter of complaint to Nissan HQ both in USA and Japan.
2007-08-19 17:58:43
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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learn
you do not buy 18k worth of anything without a written contract. not even from your grandmother.
next, you never do any business concerning a loan without seeing the APR number printed in the right place on the contract. Never.
meanwhile,
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the guy who sold you the car works for someone there at the dealership ... likely the sales manager. [if not him, the general manager]
thus, there is someone you can see tomorrow about this.
if they won't let you see him/her/it, the person you see is the Federal District Attorney or your attorney. Truth in Lending, a Federal law, may have been violated here.
GL
2007-08-19 16:25:02
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answer #4
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answered by Spock (rhp) 7
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It sounds like he is trying to rob you.
Whatever the terms of the loan papers you signed are what you are obligated to pay. You should have a copy of the loan papers you signed. If you don't, ask him to see his. If it doesn't have your signature on it, it isn't a valid contract. If he doesn't provide you a copy, he is definitely trying to rob you and you need to hire a good lawyer.
In the meantime, don't park the car on the street or the dealer will have it towed/repossessed and pull the same scam on another person.
2007-08-19 16:24:27
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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I would contact an Attorney if I were you and see if you can get some legal advice because it looks like your going to have to sue them for unethical business practices.
It's always so convenient when the person who ripped you off is out of town and nobody else can do anything about it.
You should have at least something in writing saying what he sold it to you for.
You can also contact the Better Business Bureau and see if they've had any complaints filed against them and if they haven't then file one of your own.
http://www.bbb.com
I hope you get this cleared up and everything works out for the best for you.
And if you can sue them and teach them a lesson.
2007-08-19 16:23:40
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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contact a district manager and tell him what happens.i had this happen at a fored dealer. we bought a new car for the advertized price and interest rate of 1.9%.when i got my payment booke it was for 15%.i raised can with the salesman and finance guy.i then got in touch with the district manager. by the end of the next day i had my new payment book with the interest rate of 1.9%.if this fails contact your tv stations that have complaint depts. also contact your atty general
2007-08-19 18:10:38
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answer #7
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answered by charlsyeh 7
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Chinagirl say you no pay BS book! Wait for salesman then if he no change book you change his look!
2007-08-19 16:27:05
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answer #8
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answered by ? 6
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