Contact the local department of motor vehicles. The fact that he is a signatory to the car loan is not relevant to the registration of the car.
They would need to have the vehicle refinanced in their name only or obtain another cosigner for the refinancing.
Yes. The judge can order the spouse who is keeping the vehicle to refinance it in their name only.
A cosigner cannot simply remove their name from the contract. The cosigner is obligated equally with the primary borrower until the loan is paid. A cosigner's credit history will be affected, hopefully in a positive way.
Only if represented on the registration.
Nothing. The only option for being remove as a cosigner is to have the original loan refinanced without the cosigner participating.
No, a cosigner has no legal rights to a vehicle unless his or her name appears on the vehicle title.
No, one can not remove a cosigner from any contract after 6 months. The cosigner will have to stay on the contract until the contract is paid.
It depends on what the title says. The title can say "The owner of the vehicle is Name 1 or Name 2." If the title says this then the cosigner has limited rights to get the car. Whoever has the vehicle can sell the car without the cosigners signature. Now if the cosigner has the car, the cosigner can sell the car without the main owners signature. If the title states Name 1 and Name 2, then you have same rights as the main owner of the car. This means if Name 1 trys to sell it, they can't sell it without your signature.
A cosigner has no legal rights to a vehicle unless his or her name is on the title. If the cosigner's name appears on the vehicle title then he or she is also a co-owner of said vehicle and any dispute in possession and ownership may need to be decided through legal procedures.
although you can quit-claim to forsake your rights to the property, you are still financially obligated. In short, he would need to refinance the vehicle to totally remove you
Yes. I believe the loaner will contact you with a past due amount, or send you a bill. If this hasn't happened yet, contact the loaner and tell them you want possesion if the car is not being paid for by the buyer. * No. A cosigner has no legal right to a vehicle unless his or her name appears on the title. The cosigner will have to make the payments to keep the vehicle from being reposssesed or have the vehicle refinanced in his or her name with the primary borrower being released from the current agreement, this can only be done if the lender agrees.
If a cosigner's name is not on the title they have no legal claim to the vehicle. They can file a lawsuit against the primary borrower to recover money that they contributed towards the paying of the loan.