It is very difficult to answer these questions, you are not providing any of the specifics of your particular contract (nor should you you do so online!). I would recommend getting legal advise/actually showing your contract to someone who knows what the hell they are doing.
Did you mean "nullify" rather than "notify". Not having a date on the contract may not nullify the contract.
Actually a company can reposses your vehicle without notice. When the terms of a finance contract is broken the company has all rightd at that time. They are under no obligation to notify you.
The official phrase is "period of notice". It signifies how far beforehand you have to notify the partner in a contract of your intent to break that contract. E.g. a period of notice of one month on a lease requires you to announce before end of May if you want to break the lease by end of June of that same year.
A car dealership does not have a certain length of time to tell you. It is better business practice to do so when they tell you they will, within a reasonable period of time.
Every car loan contract is required to specify if the original interest rate can be raised. If the interest rate can be race the contract should specify the amount of time they have to notify the contract participants.
You can put a notice about a lost wallet in the local newspaper. Your best bet will be to notify the police department.
Nope. The dealer is completely unaware of your financial situation.
A disconnection notice is given to notify a customer or user of an item that their account is being disconnected. With many things, after a disconnection notice is given then their account will not be deleted for many days in the future.
This may vary from state to state, and I don't know what you meant by "lost the lienholder", so I'm kind of guessing here. Most of the time, the contract will say that the dealer will arrange for financing for you at a particular rate specified in the contract, and if they can't, they have some (short) window of time to notify you of the changes. Dealers generally arrange financing right away and get a pretty firm commitment from the financing company, but once in a while things do go south later, especially on used cars, and the terms change. When the dealer contacts you with the updated terms, you will need to either go back in and sign a new contract, or return the car to the dealer. You don't have a lot of wiggle room here if they did notify you. If they didn't notify you, though... at 30 days, it's too late for them to change it. They MUST finance the car at the rate specified by the contract, even if the dealership has to do it themselves. What will probably happen in practice is that they'll threaten to repossess the car if you don't come in and sign the new contract or return the car. And if you talk to a lawyer, you'll probably be told that a court will do exactly bupkis about this until the dealership actually does repossess the car, and then you'll have to sue them. The bottom line is: talk to the dealership and try to work it out.
Sorry to tell you this, but it's in the fine print somewhere in that agreement/contract you signed.
I would recommend you notify the police of that crime. (Verb)
A notice of default is used to notify a borrower that they have defaulted on their debt. To default on a debt means to fail to repay it. So a notice of default reminds the borrower that he has not made a payment on his debt on time.