I am fully intending to pay for the rifle. What? I am going to brag on this forum that I have been visiting everyday for four years that I am going to steal a firearm?
I never said that the transaction was completed correctly.
My point in posting is that I am worried that I will have to give the firearm back because I cannot afford it right now. I can afford $30/month, but not a lump sum. It isn't the end of the world, but I really want the rifle. Maybe it is childish.
I am worried and wanted advice as to whether someone could come to the house to Repo the rifle, if the contract is valid, if the ATF interested in payment and not just disposition.
What do I have to gain by either a) lying about this transaction, b) just making the whole thing up, or c) trying to justify my part in the transaction. What would be my ulterior motive? I have intentionally NOT mentioned the name of the companies involved and intentionally NOT mentioned the states involved. There is no sense in giving a company a bad name about a situation that will probably be resolved.
So NO ONE has poor customer service or poor training in Pennsylvania? The salesperson screwed up and didn't complete the transaction correctly. Mistakes happen.
I agree, gun sales must be squeaky clean. Taxes must be paid, NICS background checks must be made, the bound book must show the logged firearms, etc.
What amazes me is that I thought with your last post that we were going to "agree to disagree". I was thinking, "maybe he isn't such a bad guy after all"..........Then you say, "how many times are you going to revise your chronology until you get it right?"
If you are not accusing me of lying then we simply are not communicating on some level. From my perspective, I have not changed any facts in the chronology. Maybe I was not explicit.
The troubling paragraph in my first post I think is this:
"I got a call today from the salesperson, she never had me complete a credit check form and never sent it to the finance company. Someone printed my contract, she took it and I signed it. So she wants my info over the phone. "well, worst case scenario you will have to mail us a check for <x number of dollars>"."
Maybe I could have phrased it more correctly such as:
I got a call from the salesperson, she said that she never had me complete a credit check
She said that at the time of purchase, someone in Finance Dept printed the contract and she gave to me
She further asked for my credit application information over the phone.
She closed the conversation by saying, "well, worst case scenario you will have to mail us a check for <x number of dollars>"
My point in posting is that I am worried that I will have to give the firearm back because I cannot afford it right now. I can afford $30/month, but not a lump sum. It isn't the end of the world, but I really want the rifle. Maybe it is childish.
I will call on Monday to see what the company has figured out. I am curious if anyone other than the salesperson is aware of any credit discrepancy. If she says that everything is good, then I will mail the first payment certified/signature required. I figure if they cash the first check then the credit company is accepting the terms of the contract that I have in hand.