No, neither the owner nor the co-owner of a vehicle has to have a drivers license. Only the person who actually drives the vehicle needs a license.
A cosigner or coowner cannot repossess a vehicle. That is something the leinholder does.
I don't think so not without their approval.
Yes
Number plates. British number plates are issued for the whole life of the vehicle and do not signify whether the vehicle is licenced or not.
Yes. Anyone can file suit against anyone for any reason. Whether it gets dismissed right off the bat or not is dependent.
The co-owner of the Pequod was Captain Peleg.
You could get licenced, but you can't operate a commercial vehicle while taking it.
You can't drive any class of vehicle that way. If you don't have the licence, or else a permit and an appropriately licenced driver with you, you can't drive it.
If it's licenced as a vehicle with a Gross Vehicle Weight Rating of under 26,000 lbs., and it's kept under that weight, than no.
The primary and cosigner on a car note are equal owners. Neither has the "right of ownership" over the other. This is a common misconception. Both may not benefit from the transaction, but both will be negatively affected if the note is not paid.
You can not legally use off road fuel in a licenced road vehicle
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