Possibly, if such a clause is included in the purchase contract. Largely depends on the severity of what is "wrong" in the description, i.e. the description of the car claims that it has never been in an accident yet a CARFAX report states that it has. A lawyer may have to be consulted in some cases.
NO, you bought the car and you own the car. That new car is now a used car. There is no cooling off period on the purchase of a vehicle. That law only applies to unsolicited sales.
yes by all state laws if on the contract if the milage is not the same on the car its a voidable contract already been thru this
If insurance is required by your contract then the 'wrong' insurance might be a contract violation allowing repossession. You have to read your contract.
Well, it all depends if all the features are listed within the contract you signed, if it does you have a breach of contract issue, which can be mediated or at the worse, have the contract voided and return the car. In any event, read your contract, if it lists the options you wanted, and the car does not have them, take the contract to a lawyer and have him send a letter to the dealership you got the car from. This will cost you anywhere from $100 to $ 500, but you will get a much better response from the dealer than if you just went down there waiving the contract at them, getting a lawyer tells them you mean buisiness. Just make sure you read that contract word for word first.
You cannot break a contract unless there is something that is documented wrong with the car and the dealership refuses to repair it. There is no provision for a change of mind, only a lemon law.
Give us the make, model, year and a good description of the symptoms and we will try to help.
If the car that the dealer delivers is not the car that is identified in the contract, then the DEALER is in default, not you.
Would you want them to redo the contract if the roles were changed?
A car note is a contract and you need to be 18 to enter into a contract.
Whose kids, what kids? If you have provided your insurance company with the driver's license information, name, birthday, and any other information for your children who live with you then yes, they will be covered on your policy. If you have not given the company this information, they will not be covered as you have committed material misrepresentation and voided the contract.
If you're making payments you signed a contract. When you return your car you've broken your contract. Yes there is consequences when you break a contract.
It should not.