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CaregardTo contact the retail tranche fraudulently altered? Is it illegal?

I bought a vehicle from that dealer in July 2008 with an extended warranty from a company called CareGard Texas. The contract stipulates $ 3,900 went to CareGard, when in fact a Toyota dealer located prepaid maintenance program for $ 1,400 with $ 2,500 guaranteed Caregard, the maximum they can pay by law, in the total of 3900 as indicated on the line "Mechanics of protection." My contract retail installment shows $ 3,900, plus a copy Toyota, but the distributor, after having signed the papers and left the franchise, helmed dollars in 3900 and to $ 2,500, handwritten on the copy sent to Caregard while the copy I have and Toyota Financial Services shows $ 3,900. I was under the assumption that all of a contract of sale shall be detailed by line, indicating the exact amount and that amount will go to avoid any confusion, and corruption to occur. I think the dealer has slipped the maintenance program of $ 1,400, paid into the program Caregard, some overlapping coverage, to raise money for the services they hope will never have to be made, Assuming the customer does not notice. I do not see how an interview "prepaid" program can be grouped in a line on the installment contract that is specifically for "Protectors of mechanical failure" only. CEO of Toyota Hoffman, Tyrell Dabrowski, and CFO, Anthony Martinez, have repeatedly told me "is how it has always been done." Maybe how "its always been done" has been misleading, but I wonder if this is purely and simply fraudulent contract that may affect hundreds and hundreds of people.

I guess you have buyer's remorse about these products guarantee that you sold. You should. Any extended warranty is like calling a mechanic $ 2,000, and he will repair your car. Whether it needs repairs. It often makes more profit on the sale to a customer a guarantee that we do on the actual sale of the vehicle. Sad but true. Good luck.

Tell your story to your state Attorney General. It is not "always done it that way." Each time a contract is altered it becomes null and void.

Posted on March 16, 2010.
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