In this day and age you can be sued for anything. If you sold the car "As Is" and have this in writing or a witness, you are probably fine. If however you sold the car and have none of this you may loose if the buyer lies about it. Did you know the car was about to break? If so, you may loose. Depends on the circumstances and what was said. If you even implied a warranty you may loose. If it is a minor repair I would fix the car and forget it.
Selling to a Private buyer
traditional selling is where the sales person take maintain control of the conversation from start to finish and persuad the buyer to buy even where the buyer is not in need.
you have every right to denie him as long as you sold it "as is" and had him sign the paper saying it
If it is a dealer it is not very good business. Unfortunetly, if it is a private person selling the vehicle they can. It is up to the buyer to be careful not to get a lemon. That is why there is the saying "BUYER BEWARE"
Yes the co-buyer can insure the car because basically its saying that the co-buyer has ownership in the automobile as well as the buyer.
buyer
No, as long as you tell the buyer it is on.
That's decided by the buyer and seller.
Nothing. They are just two people saying they will be responsible for the loan. The difference is where you sign on the contract. Legally there is no difference. The co-buyer by signing is saying that they will insure the loan gets paid. If the loan does not get paid the co-buyer can have wages garnished and basically get the wrath of someone else not doing what they are supposed to.
You want to make the advertisement attract a buyer. Make sure you give the year of the trans am, the condition and miles. Use words that will draw the buyer in.
Yes. It is for sale and currently have a secret buyer .
Yes if the buyer mentions that the seat belts are broke before the purchase of vehicle. After the purchase of the vehicle it's the buyer responsibility.