Beaverton Nissan
beaverton,#2UPDATE Employee
Sat, October 17, 2009
Mr. Robert,
if you wanted to complain and really felt like you were done wrong, you should have exercised your right as a consumer through legal channels. Anyone can file a report like this without all the actual facts and details. Your writing for a highly educated person is par or substandard. Please feel free to call the store and we will be happy to listen to all the facts and still try to resolve the matter amicably. I am the person in the report you mentioned which you could not even spell or pronounce or not that matters say the ethnicity right. I did not know to be a decent citizen of this great country you had to be born here. It does not matter as your complaint is just biased based upon your hatred and prejudice that is un called for. i don't know any body here to make fun of mike krzyzewski name or his or his parents ethnicity. your complaint is full of contradictions based upon the simple financing laws and all procedures for any dealership for financing a consumer loan. any way, we will be happy to meet with you on your terms and try to resolve any unresolved issues Mr. Robert and treat you fairly and without any prejudice.
respectfully,
Beaverton Nissan Mangement team
M. Okhovat
Robert
Jacksonville,#3Consumer Comment
Mon, November 27, 2006
Neither Pakistanis, nor Iranians are "Arabs". Pakistanis are just that...Pakistanis. Iranians are Persian. The OP's entire story is rife with blatant racist insults and other vile insinuations. Please change your name.
Michael
Bountiful,#4Consumer Comment
Mon, November 27, 2006
I agree with Paul. Have the financing all lined up before you go into a dealership. There are cases out there where consumers have been Spot Delivered (Google, as Paul metioned), had the dealership pull the deal and then been taken to court. Dealerships are LOSING these cases. You have a signed contract with the dealership with down payemnt and interest rate? Have you bought insurance for the vehicle? It is plated? Made your first payment? If you can answer YES to some or all of these questions, the car is yours. When you go to court ask the judge: (1) why the check was cashed if it wasn't enough? (2) Why was my (your) credit good enough to take the new vehicle off the dealership's lot but not get financed?. Dealership man will get a little uncomfortable when he has to answer those questions. Keep the car in the garage locked up so repo man has a difficult time. If you have to go anywhere use someone elses car. This is especially important if you have to go back to the dealership. Oh, and bring someone with you. This person will be a witness to any conversation(s). If for some reason you have to give the car back (highly unlikely) the dealership absolutely has to give you your money back. Don't let them B.S. you on this. Then take them to small claims court! :) Keep us posted as I hate car dealerships and enjoy reading about consumers getting LEGAL revenge on them! Cheers!!
Paul
Anaheim,#5Consumer Suggestion
Sun, November 26, 2006
Personally, I don't know what you do in a case like this. This never happens to me. When I go in to buy a new car, I don't need a handout from some bank to do it. I have the money, or else I wouldn't be there in the first place. When I drive away, the thing has been paid for. But, I understand that most people buy on credit. You end up paying thousands more in loan and interest charges. Which makes no sense, because if you are that poor that you can't afford to pay cash in the first place, why in the hell would you ever agree to pay an extra $10,000 in loan fees? But, you can't argue with people. They work off of credit. That's exactly why the lenders are so profitable. Whether it's sense or nonsense, it's just the way people do things. Regardless, I know what this is called. Spot delivery scam. Google. Read. Somebody out there on the internet has a website with the answer on it. You want to avoid this mess in the future? Drive THIS car until you saved up enough CASH to buy the next one. Problem solved. It's as easy as buying a freakin hamburger when you actually have real money to spend. You get to cut out all that haggling and arguing over down-payment and trade-in value.