I went there 2 weeks ago and signed a a purchase agreement. You are required to sign this and put $1000.00 down before they help. I fully understood this document, and I'm not saying the document itself is fraudulent. This purchase agreement states that the deposit, or $800.00 thereof, is only refundable if the dealer (Calvin) does not buy the car for you. It makes sense, because if they buy the car, and then you don't commit to buying it, they're stuck with the car. However, the way Calvin conducted business was fraudulent, and I ended up with no car, and $1000.00 less in my pocket. What Calvin does, or did to me at least, is call you and tell you what the total price is with financing and what the monthly payments would be.
So if it sounds like a good deal, you tell Calvin, buy the car, which is what I did. The next day, when I arrived to sign the financing contract, Calvin didn't even bother to ask if I wanted to read the financing contract. I found this suspicious and demanded that I read it first. When I did, I discovered the monthly payments were actually $60.00 more than what he and I had agreed on on the phone, and the final price of the vehicle with financing was a whole $7000.00 more than what we had discussed on the phone. Now, if Calvin was off by a few dollars, that would be understandable. But I'm not paying $7000.00 more than what I agreed on for a vehicle. After reading this, I told him there was no way I was paying $7000.00 more than we had agreed on for the vehicle and Calvin stated that since I had already told him to buy it, I was out of luck and out of my $1000.00. However, I only told him to buy it, because the financing numbers we discussed over the phone sounded good.
Auto auction advisors I went there 2 weeks ago and signed a a purchase agreement. You are required to sign this and put $1000.00 down before they help. I fully understood this document, and I'm not saying the document itself is fraudulent. This purchase agreement states that the deposit, or $800.00 thereof, is only refundable if the dealer (Calvin) does not buy the car for you. It makes sense, because if they buy the car, and then you don't commit to buying it, they're stuck with the car. However, the way Calvin conducted business was fraudulent, and I ended up with no car, and $1000.00 less in my pocket. What Calvin does, or did to me at least, is call you and tell you what the total price is with financing and what the monthly payments would be. So if it sounds like a good deal, you tell Calvin, buy the car, which is what I did.
The next day, when I arrived to sign the financing contract, Calvin didn't even bother to ask if I wanted to read the financing contract. I found this suspicious and demanded that I read it first. When I did, I discovered the monthly payments were actually $60.00 more than what he and I had agreed on on the phone, and the final price of the vehicle with financing was a whole $7000.00 more than what we had discussed on the phone. Now, if Calvin was off by a few dollars, that would be understandable. But I'm not paying $7000.00 more than what I agreed on for a vehicle. After reading this, I told him there was no way I was paying $7000.00 more than we had agreed on for the vehicle and Calvin stated that since I had already told him to buy it, I was out of luck and out of my $1000.00. However, I only told him to buy it, because the financing numbers we discussed over the phone sounded good.
Auto Auction Advisors Reviews
I went there 2 weeks ago and signed a a purchase agreement. You are required to sign this and put $1000.00 down before they help. I fully understood this document, and I'm not saying the document itself is fraudulent. This purchase agreement states that the deposit, or $800.00 thereof, is only refundable if the dealer (Calvin) does not buy the car for you. It makes sense, because if they buy the car, and then you don't commit to buying it, they're stuck with the car. However, the way Calvin conducted business was fraudulent, and I ended up with no car, and $1000.00 less in my pocket. What Calvin does, or did to me at least, is call you and tell you what the total price is with financing and what the monthly payments would be.
So if it sounds like a good deal, you tell Calvin, buy the car, which is what I did. The next day, when I arrived to sign the financing contract, Calvin didn't even bother to ask if I wanted to read the financing contract. I found this suspicious and demanded that I read it first. When I did, I discovered the monthly payments were actually $60.00 more than what he and I had agreed on on the phone, and the final price of the vehicle with financing was a whole $7000.00 more than what we had discussed on the phone. Now, if Calvin was off by a few dollars, that would be understandable. But I'm not paying $7000.00 more than what I agreed on for a vehicle. After reading this, I told him there was no way I was paying $7000.00 more than we had agreed on for the vehicle and Calvin stated that since I had already told him to buy it, I was out of luck and out of my $1000.00. However, I only told him to buy it, because the financing numbers we discussed over the phone sounded good.
Auto auction advisors I went there 2 weeks ago and signed a a purchase agreement. You are required to sign this and put $1000.00 down before they help. I fully understood this document, and I'm not saying the document itself is fraudulent. This purchase agreement states that the deposit, or $800.00 thereof, is only refundable if the dealer (Calvin) does not buy the car for you. It makes sense, because if they buy the car, and then you don't commit to buying it, they're stuck with the car. However, the way Calvin conducted business was fraudulent, and I ended up with no car, and $1000.00 less in my pocket. What Calvin does, or did to me at least, is call you and tell you what the total price is with financing and what the monthly payments would be. So if it sounds like a good deal, you tell Calvin, buy the car, which is what I did.
The next day, when I arrived to sign the financing contract, Calvin didn't even bother to ask if I wanted to read the financing contract. I found this suspicious and demanded that I read it first. When I did, I discovered the monthly payments were actually $60.00 more than what he and I had agreed on on the phone, and the final price of the vehicle with financing was a whole $7000.00 more than what we had discussed on the phone. Now, if Calvin was off by a few dollars, that would be understandable. But I'm not paying $7000.00 more than what I agreed on for a vehicle. After reading this, I told him there was no way I was paying $7000.00 more than we had agreed on for the vehicle and Calvin stated that since I had already told him to buy it, I was out of luck and out of my $1000.00. However, I only told him to buy it, because the financing numbers we discussed over the phone sounded good.