A lien means that money is owed on your vehicle. If there is no more money owed, then there is no longer a lien, and the vehicle cannot be repossessed.
You are suppose to register your vehicle in the state you live the most time in.
Normally you have to have the vehicle registered in the state that you reside in. The only exception is for military members.
Your vehicle should be registered in the state you live in.
In most cases you need to insure the car with a policy written in the state that the vehicle is registered. Many states require that the insurance companies report the vehicles that they are insuring to the state for cross reference of motor vehicle registrations. So if you live in state A and your vehicle is registered in state A but insured in state B then state A will think that your vehicle is not insured and revoke your vehicle registration. Now if you live in state A but register and insure your vehicle in state B then you run the risk of not adhereing to the law that says you must register the vehicle in the state of your primary residence. If you have a legitimate reason for doing this such as a second residence in another state at which you keep a vehicle then you should have no problem doing this. If you are doing it to avoid higher taxes or insurance premiums then you will be doing something illegal.
It's "per se", not "per say", and you have to be a resident of the state you register a personal vehicle in.
That depends on what state you live in.
Yes, your co-signer can be live another state.
Usually the bank has a list of repo companies they do biz with and they pick one to repo the car. Maybe the closest to the car, maybe the cheapest, whatever.
No, but depending on which state you live in your division of motor vehicles (or equivalent) can fine you hundreds of dollars for not having insurance.
What state do you live in?
Chris, I dont know the laws in your state(you didnt mention where you are)but in my state, i do it all the time. I just wait till no one is home and unhook and go. Can you really "live" in a state park??