Yes ... they will have a legal warrant in hand and if there is resistance, the police will be called.
yes
It is possible for someone to come onto private property in order to possess your car in North Carolina. If you have not paid you car off, it is never yours until it is paid off.
Yes.
Yes, if it was not locked. They cannot breach the peace to repossess a vehicle but they can come on your property to get their property, namely the car you do not own. It is their car until you pay for it. So legally they have only recovered their property.
When you signed the contract to buy "your" car, you are also giving written permission for an agent to enter your private property and take back the bank's car. Read before you sign!
No, they are allowed to come and take it away.
they would have to get a warrant and have an officer come with them.
nope, NOT LEGALLY.
To arrange for a car to be towed from your driveway, you can contact a towing company and provide them with the location of your driveway and details about the car to be towed. They will then schedule a time to come and remove the car from your property.
If it isn't locked up, yes. After the bank has finished the repo papers the car belongs to the bank. Yes they can come on your property because you gave the lender permission in the loan agreement you signed.They cannot damage your property.
No. A car is personal property.
Short answer, yes. Even though you are on the property jointly, she is a responsible party on the cosigned loan. As such, she owns the cowned property same as you. If you own a car together, for instance, she owns as much of the car as you do. It is her car. It is still your car, but for the purposes of securing satisfaction for the eventual judgment on the other loan, she owns the car.