No. Only a bank, court or dealership, is allowed to repossess the vehicle. In which if the car is yours and you have the title and proper documents proving that the vehicle you bought is yours. And if that "someone else" is not a spouse, Than no they are not allowed to take your car as it would be classified under auto theft. My recommendation is to alert the "credit card company" That the vehicle is yours and they should go after the debtor. The person whom sold it to you should of made you aware of this debt.
No, you can not give credit that you have to someone else. You can loan someone money or your credit card, but you are still responsible for paying the credit card company back.
It depends on the terms and conditions of the credit card company. Ask them to send you a copy if you do not have the one that came with your credit card.
This depends on the company that one has their credit card with. The company that one has a credit card through usually has a program that will track where one is spending the most money.
You can go to the credit card company if you need evidence, they can help you track the charges. Then you go to the police.
Phone the person's card company - tell them you'd like to make a payment - then follow their instructions.
In order to find out what the pros and cons of a credit card are and how you use one, you may need to talk to a credit card company representative or someone else who owns a credit card that can explain how it is used and how it works.
If your credit card is already being used, then someone has stolen the credit card information and is using it. Someone who works in a restaurant or retail establishment can be stealing your information. They have small hand held units they can run your card through, which reads the information encoded in the strip of your credit card, they then sell the information gathered to identity thieves. They then have your information to be able to use your credit card over the internet and by phone. You should Immediately contact the Police.
Yes, they are a creditor that can make a claim on your estate.
Get ahold of your credit card company and have them run the name along with the social security number to check the purchases of the card or cards.
It could be that your business has reached its credit limit for the month. It could also be that someone using the business credit card is buying something not business related and the credit card company has stopped the card temporarily.
No.
The credit card company has no obligation to reimburse or dismiss charges on the account unless indentity fraud is involved. A case where the card or card info was stolen and used without the knowledge of the holder. If the card holder knew the card was used fraudlently and did not report it in a timely manner, the company is still not legally obligated.