No
Technically, you can't do this, she has to do it. Assuming she wants to...Usually, there's a place on the back of the title that the owner can sign to transfer the title to someone else. You'll also have to file the change with the DMV or your location's equivalent.
Transferable means that you can TRANSFER something to someone else. Generally, this is used for documents. For instance, the title/deed (papers that show who owns a car or a house) is in your name and someone asks, are they transferable? This means, CAN they be transfered to someone else's name.
If you don't transfer them to someone else by signing a grant deed then you still own them.If you don't transfer them to someone else by signing a grant deed then you still own them.If you don't transfer them to someone else by signing a grant deed then you still own them.If you don't transfer them to someone else by signing a grant deed then you still own them.
You can sell your real property if there is a conveyance title in someone else's name, but the money will not legally be yours. The money will belong to the person who has the title.
If the car has not been paid for then you can not transfer the ownership to someone else without paying the vehicle off.
no. not unless the lender allows you & it won't. you would have to sell the car, pay off the loan & then transfer title. all at the same time.
Your creditor most likely holds the car title and/or there is a lien on your title. So, you will be unable to transfer title without paying the lien. The easiest thing to do is to bring your payments up to date and then to sell the car if payments are too high for you to manage on a regular basis.
Yes
it means, if someone who has the infected title and is using it knifes you, then you are "infected" by them, so you get the title. STD works the same way, but you have to knife someone else who has the title and is using it, then you get it.
no
it would be listed on the title
A: Stocks B: Debt