Yes you can. The main interest of the financial institution or or owner of the property is to have the property paid for.
Make your car payments.
About the same. Don't make your payments and they will come get it. Then you still owe the difference as stated on the contract.
Call the lender you make your car payments to and ask.
If you do not make car payments you will default on your loan or lease. It will ruin your credit and end up with a repossession.
It wouldn't be a repossession, but if he has had to make the payments, he could sue the primary borrower and might get possession from the court.
In the state of Nevada, if you do not make payments on a car you are buying, it can be repossessed with no notice given to you. Once repossessed, you will still be liable for all further payments even if the car is sold at auction to another buyer.
You being arrested has no bearing on your loan. As long as you make the payments on time there will be no repossession. The loan company does not care if you are in jail as long as they get their money.
You can expect repossession. As for advice: don't keep anything in your car that you don't want to haul out in a garbage bag at 2 AM.
One payment may not be enough to stop the progress of the repossession proceedings. You need to communicate with the mortgage company and arrange to make regular payments.
You can always make an offer, but its up to the lender whether its accepted.
(1) Make your payments. (2) Call the bank and work out the detales.
Your best bet would be to pay your payments to stop the repo and make contact with your finance company.