You can get that at any insurance company or any title and tag service.. this really isnt something you need to get or reccommended to buy.. waste of cash
Contact the claims department of the title insurance underwriter that issued your policy.
The cosigner on an automobile loan is not the person who has to pay for insurance on the vehicle. The registered owner should pay the fees for insurance. However, it is the cosigner's responsibility to make sure the registered owner is carrying insurance for the vehicle.
You can learn about Title Insurance through your bank, if you are taking a loan out for a mortgage on your house, then you will need to make sure you have Title Insurance. You can also learn about whether you need it or want it through Title Insurance agencies that offer information about this specifically.
Title insurance is protection that ensures that you are the proper owner of the property and that if someone comes forward with a valid claim to a portion of your property, the title insurance company may have to pay that person the value of the claim. In buying real estate you have to make sure that the seller truly owns the property in full with no defects in title. The title insurance company reviews the land records to make sure of this. If the company states that the owner is the full owner, it backs its opinion with title insurance. Some title defects might not be covered though, but the lawyer helping the buyer will make sure that it is safe to buy the property.
Cosigner just means someone who guaranteed the note. What's on the title? If the cosigner is on the title, he/she is entitled to half of the proceeds of a sale or insurance liquidation because it's the TITLE that determines the ownership, not who paid for it.
That question doesn't really make sense. Yes your vehicle can be registered anywhere you have place of residency but uhh insurance is who ever your insurance company is IE. USAA, State Farm.....
Title Insurance Producer - somebody who sells the Title Insurance. $$$ per year - depends on the market and quantity of contacts, whom they getting business from - mortgage/loan officers, real estate lawyers and etc. It can be from 20K to 500K or even higher.
If you are keeping the car with the intention of repairing it yourself, you should be able to turn the title in to the DMV and get a non-highway title. Then when you have the car repaired, you will have to have the car inspected to show that it meets all safety requirements and get a "salvaged" title. The salvaged title will make the car harder to sell (unless you reduce the price well below blue book) and insurance companies will be reluctant to insure it. If it is an older car, some fairly minor body work could be enough to total it, and if the car still runs or minor repairs would make it driveable, I wouldn't do anything with the title. Just keep it registered and insured until you get it repaired. Unfortunately, every insurance company in the world seems to have access to every insurance claim, so they will still know it has been totaled, but you'll still have a normal title.
If you purchased an owner's title insurance policy and now you find the deed that conveyed the property to you was fraudulent you should make a claim against the title insurance AND against the malpractice insurance of the attorney who represented you when you purchased the property. Someone didn't do their job.
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No, the role of Title Insurance is to verify the ownership of the property and any liens that may be on it. The quality or legality of the buildings is outside the scope of their responsibility.
Yes, you can sell a car with a salvage title. However, in most states the title will forever be identified as "salvage" which makes the car less desirable. Also, in many states the car will need a special state inspection before it can be registered, to make sure it was properly repaired and has required equipment for safety (e.g., airbags) and emissions (e.g., catalytic converter).