You should seek legal advice from an attorney in your jurisdiction who can review your situation, examine the related documents and explain your rights and options. You may need to file a court action to have the primary borrower sign over their interest if they are not making payments.
You should seek legal advice from an attorney in your jurisdiction who can review your situation, examine the related documents and explain your rights and options. You may need to file a court action to have the primary borrower sign over their interest if they are not making payments.
You should seek legal advice from an attorney in your jurisdiction who can review your situation, examine the related documents and explain your rights and options. You may need to file a court action to have the primary borrower sign over their interest if they are not making payments.
You should seek legal advice from an attorney in your jurisdiction who can review your situation, examine the related documents and explain your rights and options. You may need to file a court action to have the primary borrower sign over their interest if they are not making payments.
You should seek legal advice from an attorney in your jurisdiction who can review your situation, examine the related documents and explain your rights and options. You may need to file a court action to have the primary borrower sign over their interest if they are not making payments.
No. that is illegal. you must be present.
The DMV doesn't care who's name the loan is in, only the name that appears on the title and registration. Either way, the lenders name would have to appear on the title since the DMV has to know who actually 'owns' the vehicle.
If lender's name is on the title as owner and/or lien holder they have the legal right to recover the vehicle and sell it if they choose to do so.
If there is a loan against the car then the bank is on the title and they own the car, your name would be on the registration but not on the title, so yes they can repo it. If you have the actual title in hand then their is no loan on it and you own the car.
You need to visit your local DMV if you want to add or change a name to a vehicle's registration.
Contact the local department of motor vehicles. The fact that he is a signatory to the car loan is not relevant to the registration of the car.
The only way to be relieved from cosigning obligations is for the primary borrower to refinance the vehicle. And no, if the person's name is not on the car title they have no ownership rights.
You CANT legally. She could report it STOLEN if you did. Best thing to do is contact the LENDER and assure them that YOU will make the payments IF they will repo it. AND get the registration out of her name. They can do that AFTER repo. Good Luck and MERRY CHRISTMAS.
Yes, only one name is required on Title,although there is more than own guarantor of the loan.
Can't unless you get your name off the loan. The person you co signed for has to get the loan changed out of your name.
Its going to be different from state to state but a prior registration for that vehicle in your name, or a title either in your name or signed over to you with a bill of sale, or a dealers report of sale document.
Take the title in to your DMV and show it to them, and get a new registration.