No of course not car registration is the state that has nothing to do with your bank or lender one has nothing to do with the other
Go to the bank or finance company and tell them what you are doing. Don't give the seller any money untill you have worked it out with the finance company.
how do you find out if the owner still owe a finance company on the car you are buying?
You can be sued by the finance company to recover any money still owed to them after they auction the repossessed mobile home.
Sure you can, but you're still responsible for paying off the loan to the finance company. If the check will cover the pay-off, give it to the finance company. If it doesn't, give it to them, anyway. It'll reduce your debt by that much.
They will....eventually. Regardless, you still owe.
You will still owe the finance company the balance of your finance note. Hopefully you have full coverage insurance. If you do have full coverage, the Comprehensive portion of your policy will generally pay off the finance company up to the insured limits (usually the remaining market value) of your insured auto.
If you don't have the title, use the registration card from the previous state. Check with the DMV to see if there is still a leinholder listed on the title. You will need the VIN #. They will give you that information. My question to you is, are they or have they tried to repo the vehicle? Is it in "repo" status?
If the driver was uninsured or only had liability insurance, they would be liable to still pay the finance company back or face a lawsuit.
no because the storage fee that the finance company charged you was what the repo company charged on the invoice. the finance company had no other reason to charge storage fee's they did not store it
Maybe
You still owe the finance company the balance owed.
You still have rights to recover the vehicle. The finance company may help you look for it if they're desperate enough to get it back. Even if your car was insured, you would legally have to payback the finance company for the car since you broke a binding finance contract.