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I recently signed a single page A4 contract, it was folded in half. I read and signed the first side, the dealer then lifted the page off the table, and turned it over displaying the other side. I read and signed that side.
Am I legally bound to conditions that were on the inside of the folded sheet, that I didn't know about, and the dealer made no attempt to show me (infact I think he attempted to hide them from me).
Thank you all in advance so much for your help.

2007-09-30 15:45:59 · 7 answers · asked by deltaqdelta 2 in Cars & Transportation Buying & Selling

7 answers

Your signature binds you. At this point, it is your word against his as far as whether or not he showed you the form. He has a signature that probably has a line above it that says "I have read the foregoing and fully understand blah blah blah..", while you have your word, he has your signature. I believe as much as it sucks, the ball is really in his court.

2007-09-30 15:51:19 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 3 0

Yes. You are bound. However there may be some exceptions. If the dealer misrepresented the terms of the contract to you, either in their scope or their content, you may be able to convince a court to set it aside, or to find that those terms were not included in the contract.

2007-10-02 00:39:37 · answer #2 · answered by kheperure 4 · 0 0

your signature will probably bind you to this ,you had a chance to probably read this,and didn't and that is what the dealer will say,never sign anything until you know exactly what your signing ,in this case they may be able to hold you to what you signed,and you proving that they attempted to hide this from you wont go over too good in court,i wouldn't mention that if it comes to going to court,its going to be your word against the dealers word,and we both know who they will believe on this one ,talk to a lawyer if its a lot of money ,they may be able to advise you of what to do,good luck with it.

2007-09-30 16:30:44 · answer #3 · answered by dodge man 7 · 0 0

You signed it which means you agreed to the terms in that contract. The only way you can get out of it is if the state you live in gives you a period to change your mind.

2007-09-30 16:11:05 · answer #4 · answered by redd headd 7 · 0 0

Because currently there are over 1,000 federal rights given to married straight couples that are not given to unmarried partners or domestic unions.

2016-05-17 21:52:21 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes you are, you signed off.

2007-09-30 15:54:17 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

yeah if you signed for it but i would talk to a lawyer just to make shure

2007-09-30 15:51:26 · answer #7 · answered by 300SD 4 · 0 0

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