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Federal rebate eligibility for Ariya premiere in Colorado - with Binding Agreement

733 Views 5 Replies 5 Participants Last post by  atreis
I am getting my Ariya Premiere in Colorado by this weekend. Want to check if anybody from Colorado have filled for the Federal Tax rebate under the pretext of binding agreement that was provided by Nissan?
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I am getting my Ariya Premiere in Colorado by this weekend. Want to check if anybody from Colorado have filled for the Federal Tax rebate under the pretext of binding agreement that was provided by Nissan?
Something special about federal taxes in Colorado?. This has been discussed to exhaustion in already existing threads.
Something special about federal taxes in Colorado?. This has been discussed to exhaustion in already existing threads.
Was trying to understand the definition of binding agreement in Colorado, since that can differ from state to state.
I think they only thing that might be state specific is the definition of a legal binding agreement.
I don't have my car yet and I have already filed my taxes. When my car come in, I will do an amended return with the vin and look forward to the $7500. I am in California not Coloradao
I think they only thing that might be state specific is the definition of a legal binding agreement.
I don't have my car yet and I have already filed my taxes. When my car come in, I will do an amended return with the vin and look forward to the $7500. I am in California not Coloradao
Yes I plan to do the same -- file soon and when car arrives complete an amended return. The "agreement" is supposedly governed by the laws of the State of Tennessee, but I don't know if we must also consider the laws of the State where we reside, if that isn't also Tennessee... I'll have to consult that oracle known as Google!
Yes I plan to do the same -- file soon and when car arrives complete an amended return. The "agreement" is supposedly governed by the laws of the State of Tennessee, but I don't know if we must also consider the laws of the State where we reside, if that isn't also Tennessee... I'll have to consult that oracle known as Google!
I posted a little information on that... The short answer is "yes, your state may have provisions that affect out-of-state contract governance provisions" but in most states it won't be an issue. New York is the mentioned exception, but even there it's just that they needed some additional language in the contract to make it effective.
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