I bought a car and they are making me come in and sign again, what are my options.?

2011-10-21 6:41 pm
I bought a car with my wife and the dealer had us come back to resign the paperwork to change the primary person on the loan. Now two weeks later I see my trade in hasnt been paid off and they just called me telling me that we need to sign again because one of the terms of the lease was incorrect. My wife and I dont want to go back again. At this point we would rather get our old car back and give them the new car. We've put about 250 miles on the new car and they replaced tires on my old car. Is it possible to get my car back without having technically signed something for the new car. Or can I even reject there offer due to me having to come back several times. thanks
更新1:

I don't think I obtained the car without giving them the wrong information. The error was that they put down the wrong mileage charge if we go over the annual mileage allowance

回答 (9)

2011-10-21 7:19 pm
✔ 最佳答案
Problem is even if they wrote something down wrong, you signed off on it without catching it. Go in, see what they want and go from there. Seems they might be willing to do something to sweeten things for you for all the trouble.

As far as getting your old car back, I can almost guarantee that won't happen.
2011-10-21 6:44 pm
If you sign again, you will be sorry. They are likely changing something that will end up costing you a LOT more money, a common tactic.

P.S. these thumbs downers obviously have not dealt with thieving dealers as long as I have. THIS is an old trick they have used for YEARS. When you go back they are going to say there is a problem with financing that you can solve by coming up with an additional 3K (or so), which you wont be able to do. THEN, they will tell you your only option is a longer contract, which will also have a much higher interest rate, which, as I said, will cost you a WHOLE lot more money than they led you to believe earlier. Trust me. Dealers know FOR SURE before they let you drive away if your credit or your co signers credit is good or bad. It takes them only minutes to get this information, even on weekends. THEY ARE GOING TO RIP YOU OFF and it's probably too late now to do anything abvout it. don't believe the story about mileage. this is a trick. If you THOROUGHLY check all the paperwork, you will find something has changed that they are not telling you about, and something they don't WANT you to notice GOOD LUCK!!!
2011-10-22 2:25 am
You are only obligated to honor what you signed...nothing more. Call the leasing company ( the lender). Explain to them what has transpired so far and tell them that you refuse to sign any more contracts...they can accept the deal as is or withdraw their approval. You are in no way obligated to agree to anything beyond what has been signed already. If the deal unwinds, insist on getting your car back or the full amount of the trade value as stated on the contract. If they put new tires on the trade in then it is their loss. As for the mileage on the new car, it was their incompetence that brought that about and you should not suffer as a result of their actions. You have honored you part of the agreement and now it is time for them to do the same. Don't worry about any threats of a law suit, they don't have a leg to stand on and juries hate car dealers! Good luck!
2011-10-21 9:53 pm
if i was you i would call a lawyer since each state has different laws on how loans are conducted.this way you will get the right answer and known exactly what to tell them regarding the terms.one thing i do know is its not legal to change a loans term after both parties signed and agreed upon it.
2011-10-21 7:57 pm
The only way to get out of the loan at this point is if the loan never got approved. This isn't the case here. The dealer just screwed up the paperwork and they want to correct their mistake.

If you don't want to go back into the dealership have them mail the paperwork to you or have a courier deliver it to you but you are obligated to sign the new papers as long as the terms of the original contract haven't changed.
2016-12-09 7:38 am
very likely. i might want to assert no finance, no automobile. in the adventure that they are fool sufficient to enable it bypass, then it really is as a lot as them to organise the agreed settlement/fund it themselves. i might want to by no potential have lower back the motorcar with out understanding i might want to get my funds decrease back, and my commerce in. you probably did not scouse borrow the automobile, they reported take it. in the adventure that they reported take it pending finance, then your'e a fool for accepting the availability, because it grow to be possible that it would want to bypass undesirable. o'smart they could placed on the blunders. i imagine they realized it grow to be an inexpensive deal, and purely needed the automobile decrease back to make more suitable on it. i might want to be speaking with the finance corporation to work out who's BSing who. BTW why are not you getting your own finance, theirs is continually costlier, and infrequently dodgy. do you nonetheless have your replica of the papers and settlement? i'd also evaluate legal thoughts for retribution.
2011-10-21 10:46 pm
Go the lawyer route and bill the dealer for it.

If they refuse to pay, sue em, they would look terrible in court & you'l likely win, but they'l likely pay you rather than goto court. Charge em for your time, too.

Oh, they want to give you less miles, how convenient for them.

F*** em.

Sure it's poss to get your old car back. Depends on two things: their vulnerablities and your ability to make em hurt till you get your way.

I did the opposite w/ Honda: got em to buy back my new-repo Accord that they botched a paint/bodywork job on after it was hit shortly after I bought it.

As w/ you, they kept calling me in to inspect the job prior to my taking possession of it.

The work was laughably amateurish and I kept refusing to take possession. And I kept driving their loaner.

Finally they called me in for a showdown w/ a bunch of honcho's standing around.

Mr Alpha Dog barks at me, "Mr Smith! That car's as good as new!"

I said, "It is?!"

He said, "Damn rite it is!"

I said, "Fine, you buy it back from me."

He stammered a while and finally choked out, "Uhhh, Ummm, we dont work that way."

I said, "That's ok. I'll just keep driving your loaner and take this up w/ the Zone Manager, Regional Manager and CEO at HQ."

They next day they called me and said I could come in and pick up my check for the purchase price -$200. which I did.

Took me 6 wks of NO NO NO and and hangups, but still, not bad work for $XX,XXX.

They thrive on bleeding ppL, so make it their turn.
參考: Researching the law and trying cases pro se in small claims, landlord tenant and mv.
2011-10-21 7:19 pm
I think at the very least you need to find somebody that knows more about writing and reading contracts, three times? I don't profess to know everything, but even that sounds fishy to me, got any friends who are attorneys? or go in there grab the dang thing and walk out the door with the last two and that one and see what is going on .
2011-10-21 6:47 pm
Sounds like you're in a bit of a problem, but it's a problem of your own making. Everything should have been done right the first time, and as the dealership only has the information you give them to work on, if it's not done right the problem is on you.

So, now what? Now, you're most likely stuck. You no longer have a new car. You have an old car. Why? You drove it off the lot and put 250 miles on it. Obviously you can't turn it back in and forget it ever happened. Besides, they own your old car. You're stuck with a car you can't return without a hefty chunk of cash out of your pocket (the difference between a new and used car, most likely) that has an invalid lease agreement. That invalid lease agreement can come back and bite you in the butt very quick since a judge will look at it and say you obtained your car under false pretenses. That will be very costly if that happens.

So, what are your options now? Go back and make the lease right? Sounds like a good option. Do nothing and hope for the best? Never works. Drop the car off and beg for your old one back? Worth a shot, but costly. Those are your options. Pick what works best for you.


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