The title is only released when the debt or loan is paid in full. If you want the lender to pick up the car, I'm guessing that you can't or don't want to make the payments. The lender can refuse to pick up the car, but, if the debt remains unpaid, they will probably have the car repossessed which will negatively affect your credit rating.
No.
If the payment is late or not in full, then yes. If the payment is on time and in full, then no.
No.
The answer is NO, unless the lender approves of the sale. Contact the lender.
Sure. To transfer title, pay the lender and the lender will sign off, then whatever is left from the sale, you get to keep.
Yes. Im not 100% sure how the process goes,but the sellerwill have to notify his/her lender or whomever of whats going on. Buyer will provide payment and i believe your lender will forward the title to the buyers lender.
Take the buyer & title to the car with you to the lender that holds the lien on the vehicle. Use the money he is paying you to pay off the loan and get a lien release from the lender. Sign the car over to the buyer at the lender's place of business. Take this lien release and the title with you and the buyer to your DMV, and transfer the car into the buyer's name.
I doubt that the title is still valid; but check with your lender before you make loan payments and make sure. They should be holding title in your name with a lien.
If there is money owed to the lender with the vehicle used as collateral, the lender will be shown as a lien holder on the title and can if the contract is defaulted recover the vehicle according to the laws of the state in which it is registered. yes
Get a lien release from the lender and take it to the DMV.
You don't. You voluntarily surrender the vehicle to the lender, or at least offer the ooprtunity for the lender to secure it. If the lender declines, you get this in writing and ask the lender to surrender the title to you. On the outside chance this occurs, you take the title to the DMV and change the title.
The lender files a WRIT of REPLEVIN and the sheriff goes out and gets the car. IF the lender has a lien on the truck,ect. All that legal stuff. LOL