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Motor Vehicle Deptment can do a title search for a fee and issue you a new title if it comes back clean.
You don't. Either the owner or family member,if the person has passed away must get transfer of title and then they must pass it on to you. There are a few cases where a court could transfer it over. But your question in no way states how you have come to think you should own this car.
Remo Trentini passed away in Dallas, Texas in 1999.
The word for today is "executor." An Executor is entrusted with finalizing the legal affairs of a decedent (someone who passed away) and transferring the decedent's assets to those entitled to them. As such, they are allowed to perform any legal act, like transferring a title, that the decedent could have done if he or she were still alive. So the first thing you need to do is to find the executor. Go to the website of the newspaper serving the area the owner lived in, and look up either Records or Obituaries. Find the owner and look to see what funeral home handled the decedent's final arrangements. Call that funeral home and ask them for the name of the executor. Then call the executor and tell that person you have a claim against the estate, specifically that you need a title conveyed to you.
If you have the title signed by the registered owner, you can usuall get away with it but it is usually easier to bring the title holder to the trade in
Tex Ritter was born in Murvaul , Texas . He passed away January 2, 1974 in Tennessee .
Yes if you take the MSO that you get with a New vehicle you can title that in any state. There may be an issue with Taxes so be sure to keep any receipts to prove you Did taxes in Texas.
No, he passed away in Dallas Texas on October 14, 2012.
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El Paso, Texas is where he was born and raised.
Texas did rebel against Mexico, because Mexico passed 7 laws which did away with the many constitutional reforms.
If you have the car, sell it, keep it, or give it away. If you no longer have the car, contact your local DMV for advice.