Yes, if the vehicle was purchased during the marriage it is considered community property.
Depends on the state you live in. If it is a community property state, all debts and assets are considered to belong to both spouses. If not, then only the person who signed the contractual agreement is responsible. However, jointly titled assets are not necessarily exempt from creditors. It depends on how they are held and what they are.
State Farm Insurance often advertises that it offers automobile insurance. This is primarily the type of insurance that the company is in the business of selling.
IF you can prove any "promise", call a local attorney for state specific advice. Chances are very good that they can repo as long as you are in DEFAULT.
In a community property state both spouses are equally responsible for debts. The rest of the states consider only the account holder responsible. A few states have laws referring to debts that are considered necessities being chargeable to both spouses. These laws are vague and seldom enforceable, creditors sometimes cite them in an attempt to get the non-debtor spouses to pay.
You need to contact your Attorney General about this one. You will get the correct answer based on NY law. Read your contract it should state if there is any "linkage" between the loans.
As many as your finance agreement specifies.
Inter-State - automobile - was created in 1909.
The word 'automobile' is a noun, a word for a thing.A verb is a word for an action or a state of being."Automobile is a noun." The word "is' is the verb, the state of being of automobile.
This is best answered by a loacl attorney who knows all the details and can relate state specific laws to each.
Your state may have other requirements that you have to meet to do so. At the very least, you need a loan contract that perfects the security agreement.
A lien is not subject to a statute of limitations. The lien was placed on the automobile through due process or the signed agreement entered into by the parties.
Not in my state.
To be in a state of agreement and harmony
Legally and according to the agreement you signed, there may be a grace period that is clearly spelled out in your contract. After that window of time, they can immediately seize your automobile due to non payment. Often if the first payment is late, they will seize the automobile immediately.
depends on what state you are in.
depends on the state, but NC not necessary
The state doesn't repossess your car - private companies do that on behalf of the lienholder. They don't charge you for private property left in your car when they repossess it - that would be illegal. They charge a "storage fee" for the items they remove from your car. Underhanded, yes, but they can legally do it.