A relative that lives out of the country cannot co-sign for a car loan. Financial institutions require a signer and co-signer to be a US citizen or a US permanent resident with green card.
If you have equity in it, sell it. If you have a relative who wants the car and has 15k, take the money, pay off the loan and sign the car over to the relative.
Yes.Yes.Yes.Yes.
Relative to the car you are motionless. Relative to the road you are moving at the speed of the car. Relative to the sun you are moving at the speed of Earth as it orbits the sun (30km a second).
I think that if a person is insured and lives in the same household than you shouldn't have to exclude them from driving your car if they are a relative
Yes, of course you can. The ownership of the car (in the UK) would then need to be changed from you to your relative. In the UK, details would need to be sent to the DVLA (Driver & Vehicle Licensing Agency), which is probably a department differently named if you are living in a foreign country.
Does the car insurance covers a relative-visitor who wants to borrow a car for a few days?
go to where he lives/hangs out. look for him or his car/ truck bang on his window or call his name
If the resident relative has their own car insurance, this resident relative should not also be covered on your policy. If this resident relative drives your car more than on occasion, then, he/she should be on your policy as well.
It is tough, but if you have the title signed, it can happen. Check your state rules and see if you have to have a temporary "power of attorney" if you do, he will have to sign and fax it to you. You can get the form on your state's website. If your state does not require it, then you should be good to go if you have a signed title.
The state laws governing buying a car from a relative in the state of Illinois is the same for a relative as with any other person. Contact the Department of Motor Vehicles for exact instructions to legally purchase the car.
At rest and in motion are relative terms. When we say 'in motion' or 'at rest' we mean relative to something else. If you were travelling in a car for instance, you would be at rest relative to the car but in motion relative to the outside world.
The relative pronoun in the sentence is 'who', which introduces the relative clause 'who left the keys in the car'. The word 'one' is also a pronoun, an indefinite pronoun.