Read the contract. If the second car is connected to the first, yes. Otherwise, not without a judge signing off.
Yes, in both circumstances. When you sign the contract it is pending approved credit. The dealership owns the car and figures it can get you financed by the banks but when that fails to happen the dealership still owns the car. You are just driving till the contract is bought by the bank. The Sales rep can and will get the car because it isn't being reposed. They own it and he is representing them in getting it back. Sorry it happened to you but it does happen out there
They are not going to repossess a vehicle because you were rude. They can however repossess it if you miss just one payment.
They won't repossess it for your license being suspended, but they can repossess it when you fail to make payments, regardless of what the current status of your license is.
If you have not fully paid for the car, it is not yours. The loan papers allow you to use the car until it is paid for; without the agreement you have nothing.
Dogs get rabies from being bitten by another animal that is already infected.
Yes it can.
They don't really need to. If a bank wants to reposses your car, they will hire a repo man to do it. Licensed repo's have master keys from the car manufacturers that can get them into most cars. Do you owe to a bank or to the dealership? The dealership has a key to your car. The bank can work with the dealership in a similar way. If you owe the bank and there either is no dealership involved or the dealership cannot provide a key, they still have options- they can tow the car, obtain a key from the manufacturer, have one made, etc. They normally already have this process taken care of before the loan is granted. Until the car is paid off, it belongs to the bank or dealership. If they are not being paid on a regular basis, they will take whatever measures legally possible to reposes their property. On a similar note, when they come out to repose the car, they have already called the local authorities. This allows them to take the car whenever and from where ever.
No. Absolutely not. If they enter a vehicle they do not have an order of repossession on, they've committed a crime. They may enter the vehicle they are there to repossess, and only the vehicle they are there to repossess.
no it cant
Unless you have an unusual contract, you are in violation as soon as you are late and they can repossess anytime they choose.
There are many places where one can find a Subaru STI for sale. One being any car dealership that sells Subaru's. Another is Autotrader, motortrend or eBay.
To my knowledge, the lender can ONLY repo when the loan is in DEFAULT. Does your acct. being minus put you in default????