1991
I believe you are allowed 7 days on your bill of sale to get the car registered.
If you have a bill of sale there is a bond you can pay for in Georgia that allow you to register the car.
When selling a car in Georgia to a private party, there is a few things you will need. You will need the title of the car, this will be used to sign over the car to the new owner so they will then have ownership of the car. You do not want to sign it over until all payment is accumulated. Once the title is signed over, the buyer has new ownership, and they wouldn't have to finish paying the balance. The second thing you would need is to a bill of sale. You can create one on your own or you can get one from the Georgia Department of Revenue, Motor Vehicle Division that is already drafted. The bill of sale will have the information, (Full name and address) of the buyer and seller, the car details, such as condition and price. The date of sale, and any liens will also be listed on the bill of sale. Both seller and buyer will sign the bill of sale. Make a copy of the bill of sale for the buyer, they will use this to get the new registration.
http://www.samples-help.org.uk/sample-letters/car-bill-of-sale.htm Contains a printable template for a bill of sale for a car, as well as telling you the information that the bill will need to contain.
No. You must prove ownership, therefore need to have the title to the car with the details of the sale completed. A bill of sale is worthless for registering a car.
Yes, have him sell it to you. Whether or not there is money exchanged that doesn't matter. Than take the bill of sale if the car is 10yrs or older and the title to the dmv and they will register and license the car to you. If the car is newer than 10yrs than you will need a secure odometer reading and a bill of sale along with the title. Also, make sure you have the title to the car and that everyone on it has signed off in the right place otherwise that can cause other problems to getting it registered and titled. Also, you only have 90days to get it registered in your name. Otherwise the dmv will tac on additional late fees.
Not if you have a copy of the bill of sale. Not if you claimed the sale as income on your annual taxes and have documentation so proving.
Contact Copart, the location you bought it from, and tell them you need the bill of sale or title.
You can get a bill of sale, which only entitles you to possess it. You can't get it registered without the title. If you're buying a vehicle with "no title" or "lost title", you may have a car with a large lien from a bank or finance company on it.
It depends on the terms the car was loaned under, but if it was registered, they would have to have forged a bill of sale. If it was not registered, or there was no recent title, claiming the car as their own is called conversion, and you can sue for the value of the car. Be prepared to prove it belonged to you.
When a car is recently purchased the buyer will get the bill of sale from the seller. They should receive it at the time of the sale. This shows that the previous owner has sold it to you.
Most definitely.