Best way to do it is let the professionals take care of that part. Contact them, show them the title and the lien to the vehicle, and let them do their thing.
An assignee of a lien is the new lien holder.
The lien holder would. A lien holder has a financial interest in the property
If a debt has been paid off, the lien holder is required to release the lien. If the lien holder refuses, you will need to get a lawyer and take the case to court
I guess the answer to this question is as unattainable as my truck seems to be. Thanks for trying. Lissa, owner of the vehicle
I think you mean LIEN (not lian) holder. A lien holder is one (an individual or company) which holds the lien to a secured real or personal property.
The lien holder is the person or firm, you borrowed the money from to purchase the car.
only if the lien holder caused the collision
Well, you own the vehicle subject to the lien. You cannot sell or refinance the vehicle until the lien holder is paid. If you don't pay the lien, the lien holder can repossess the vehicle. So you own it subject to your paying the loan.
If you don't hold the title to that truck, you have nothing to put a lien on. The title holder is the actual legal owner of that vehicle, and when you say you're saying that you're leasing it from your "employer" (in reality, you, as a lease operator would be a 1099 contractor, not an employee), it tells me they hold the title on the truck, and already have a lien on it, as well.You have nothing to put a lien on, plain and simple.
You don't. The only one who can fill out a lien relese is the lien holder. As the owner of the car you are not the lien holder. Take the title to whomever holds the lien and they will release it.
No. In the case of "brokered" loans especially the lien holder is the investor that holds the note. The lender is the broker that helped you secure your financing.
Yes.