bring it to there house then call a cab
You need to be more specific in your question. Return a car to a dealer, return a leased car, return a borrowed car to a friend, return a rental car?
That depends on how long it has been in their possesion and whether the car was yours or a rental. If it was a rental you had no right to give your friend the car. If it was your car and your friend has been in possesion for it longer than you expected, then yes, it is theft.
If you borrowed money to purchase a car then you are required to pay it back.If you borrowed money to purchase a car then you are required to pay it back.If you borrowed money to purchase a car then you are required to pay it back.If you borrowed money to purchase a car then you are required to pay it back.
Tell them to give it back, call in a recovery/repossession agent, report it stolen.
let me make sure i understand the deal. "A" borrows money.... never mind. The LEINHOLDER who repos the car will sell it and deal with the person whose name was on the LOAN for the car. IF you are NOT either of those two, you are out of luck. You have made a DONATION.
You should report the theft immediately to the police and to the car owner's insurance company.
If you let a friend borrow a car who had no insurance and you had no insurance, essentially two violations have been committed. He is responsible, but you are too. It is unlikely that a court would award you with damages.
The possessive form for the singular noun friend is friend's.Example: I borrowed my friend's bicycle.
Repossession would not be the correct procedure to get your car back. You should contact the person to say you are going to call the police if the car is not returned immediately. Then do it. If they are using your car beyond the period of the loan the use is now unauthorized.
No the borrowed money would not be taxable income to you that you would report on your 1040 federal income tax return as income in the year that the amount is borrowed.
To the car dealer? To the rental company? To your friend? You have to be more specific in the question.
I would say no. What do you mean by 'return? Do you mean 'return to the library from which you borrowed it'?