ChatterBank2 mins ago
where should finance documents be signed?
5 Answers
i have bought a car on finance and i signed the documents at a fast food retailer in a motorway service station,is this legal?i have been to that it isnt
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.they are normal hp finace docs with the normal 1/3 1/2 and 2/3 settelment figures ive been told that they needed to be signed on registerd premises and im in dispute on the settelment figure theyve given me ans i wanted to know how i stand if it goes to court any help with this would be great
thanks
thanks
Maybe this is what he was thinking of:
You have a statutory right to a cancellation period if you signed your credit agreement away from the trader�s premises, e.g. you signed at home and you talked to the seller about the deal face-to-face (rather than only on the telephone). The agreement should contain a notice of
your cancellation rights.
The cancellation period runs from the date you signed the agreement and ends five days after you received
either the second copy signed by the creditor or a separate notice of your cancellation rights.
You have a statutory right to a cancellation period if you signed your credit agreement away from the trader�s premises, e.g. you signed at home and you talked to the seller about the deal face-to-face (rather than only on the telephone). The agreement should contain a notice of
your cancellation rights.
The cancellation period runs from the date you signed the agreement and ends five days after you received
either the second copy signed by the creditor or a separate notice of your cancellation rights.
Ethel is as always correct. Where you sign the agreement affects what (if any) cooling off period you receive, but would not in itself render an agreement void.
The way settlement figures are calculated is laid down in law, and is now based on an actuarial calculation, which is far more accurate than the old "rule of 78" approximation. I would be very surprised if they were not correctly calculating the rebates due, as this would be a clear breach of their Consumer Credit Licence.
Assuming your repayments are monthly, they are entitled to charge you an additional month's interest as an early termination penalty.
What exactly is your dispute?
The way settlement figures are calculated is laid down in law, and is now based on an actuarial calculation, which is far more accurate than the old "rule of 78" approximation. I would be very surprised if they were not correctly calculating the rebates due, as this would be a clear breach of their Consumer Credit Licence.
Assuming your repayments are monthly, they are entitled to charge you an additional month's interest as an early termination penalty.
What exactly is your dispute?
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