No
The ticket will be sent to the owner because the car is registered to him/her. If the driver of the car won't pay for it, you can take him/her to court and force him to pay the fine.
Who is the legal owner or owners of a car if it is registered in one name but paid for jointly by 2 parties
Yes. Only a registered owner of a car can get the insurance. The insurance policy document and registration documents of a car both should be in a name of one person. The mismatching of documents leads to legal complications. So it is important to ensure that to get insurance, you have to be the registered owner of a car.
Are you serious with this question? No, the registered "Keeper" owner will get the bills in the mail or online. First, why would you want to insure a car twice and pay twice the bills for the same vehicle? Second, unless you own the car I doubt if you can insure it. You can pay the insurance bill if you wish but unless the car is registered in your name the bills and responsibility will go to the registered owner. Now it is NOT a good idea to provide insurance on anybodys vehicles except your own or/and your spouses.
Who holds the title to this car
The car needs to be registered in the state the owner resides in.
YES (with the owner's permission)
I believe if the car is registered under the owner, they will be notified.
If a car is totaled in an accident and only liability insurance is present, there is a chance that the other party's insurance will pay for the vehicle if the accident was their fault. If a car is totaled, but no others were involved, then the responsibility falls on the registered owner. This will not release the registered owner from paying for the vehicle, either, if money is still owed on the car.
This question will wind up in court if you ask me. The registered name on the title is the owner, period. Anyone else will have a tough time to claim ownership.
Yes you can sell it and even have it registered to the new owner, but the lien will remain on the vehicle until its paid. The new owner can make payments to you but if they fall behind it will land on your shoulders. The best bet is to have the new owner pay you the amount of the loan upfront as payment for the car, therefore you pay your loan and they buy their car.
It depends on the regulations in the specific jurisdiction, but generally, the registered owner will need to be present to retrieve a car from impound. If the registered owner is unable to do so, they can usually designate someone else to pick up the vehicle with proper authorization and identification.