Our car was supposed to be certified now they're telling us it won't be certified?

Recently my husband and I got a car. We got a 2012 used honda at the dealership. We went in to finance our car sign papers and they told us our car would be certified. Now i keep on getting calls from the person who helped us out with the paper work to finance it and he left a message saying "your car won't be certified but our payments will stay the same". So he wants us to go back into his office and sign the paper work again. My question is can I do something about it since we have our signatures where it says our car will be certified or i can't and just should sign the papers again. Help please we have to go as soon as possible to sign them

Don't sign if they can't certify it they should lower the price, find out why they are not certifying it. You don't owe them anything the papers you signed are no invalid. I would say if they won't certify it you want to bring it to an independent mechanic of your choosing.

Tell them to give the you and the bank their money back and go elsewhere. That is unacceptable

Don't sign. It will be uncomfortable but don't sign. You have a contract and the dealership is trying to void it. Don't sign. Make them live up to the original agreement.

Looks like illegal "bait and switch" marketing to me. Take the car back and change dealerships -- do NOT sign the new papers.

DO -- complain to your states' regulatory agency [frequently DMV] over this.

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commercial law summary: if they knew it wasn't going to be certified but lied, they committed fraud and you may revoke the deal. If they didn't know ['clerical error'] then the situation is "mutual mistake of fact" and the deal is void.

in either case -- leave them the car and keys, refuse the paperwork, and tell them to give you your down payment back or you'll a) sue, and b) file a complaint, and c) go to the newspapers and tv stations with your story.

what deal will you take? Let them replace the car with one that is certified -- same make, model, condition, and mileage -- even if they have to go buy the thing from their competitor to make good.