Yes. Your car can be repossed from anywhere but locked garage. The repossesion team cannot break in to a garage or other locked building. But they can still retrieve it, by serving you with papers to release the car. Keep in mind, the bank or finance company that gave you the loan for your car actually owns your car; you do not really own it. If you do not pay your loan payments and are threatened with repossesion, they have every right to get that car from you, even as it is sitting in front of your apartment, which is ostensibly private property. A friend of mine once had his car repossesed from outside his workplace while he was at work; he had to bum a ride home.
The Apt. comp. is responsible!!!!!
Some of the features of The Contour apartment complex are: On-site parking, fully furnished residents lounge, as well as a landscaped roof deck with outdoor seating.
You and your insurance company are responsible.
Yes, if the owner of the complex has given the police written permission to issue tickets on the property.
Yes, the car can be repossessed from any open location, your driveway, an open garage,and any kind of parking lot, etc. Sorry.
The biggest advantage is you only have one neighbor. Another advantage is that you will probably have a closer parking spot.
YES! Mine was.
There is covered parking with the apartments.
I dont see how unless you pay the other people for there parking spot. Only fair. Such an issue would be the decision of the owners of the apartment complex and not subject to litigation. There would be a presumption of the law that persons opposed have the choice of moving from the facility or tolerating the situation. It may not be fair, but it is legal.
That's going to be a matter of local law or, possibly, of a provision in your rental contract, Although it's perfectly legal in all places I can think of offhand. I actually just watched a car get towed from the complex I live in for parking in someone else's assigned parking spot. If the parking lot of the complex is private property, adherence to the rules of the property owner is implied by you parking your vehicle there, and they may reserve the right to have unauthorised or improperly parked vehicles removed. Parking tickets are a non-issue, unless it's public property.
Usually yes. You'll usually get a resident permit in some places but sometimes they can be open to public. If your apartment doesn't have parking spaces near your apartment, then it won't (obviously).
The greater fault lies with the person backing out of the parking space. You may still be partially at fault for not driving with due care.