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As soon as the vehicle is paid in full.
5 weeks It will vary depending on where you are at. Kansas says 30 days.
The dealer. Is the one who send. The title to other same state. And normally. They take about 6 or 8 weeks
A car dealer can hold a repo as long as he is the lien holder on the title.
A dealer will give you a dealers report of sale, which you then take to the DMV for registration purposes. The state will mail you a title with your name on it, but only when the car is paid off. If they hand you a title at the dealer it is an unreported sale and not allowed, you wont be in trouble but they can be. The above statement is most likely true, IF you live in the same state as the person who answered you. The way titles are handled varies from state to state. Here is how things are handled here in Wisconsin. The person who purchases / signs for the vehicle is given the title, regardless of how it was financed. If you get a loan for the car, the title will not only have your name on it, but also the bank/credit union/lender you received the loan from. This is known as a lien. When you have paid off the loan, the lender will either send you or give you a "lien release card," which you can just keep with your title, or they will stamp the title "PAID." If you get a loan release card (most common,) you can simply paperclip it to your title, and it's the same thing as if your title was "clean." If you prefer to have the lender's name removed from the title, you must either visit a DMV Service Center (instant, but for a fee), or send in the title and the release card to the DMV (up to 6 weeks, but free.) If they stamp the title, it must have the name of the financial institution (lender) that you got the loan from, the lien release date, the signature of the person who stamped it, and their position with the company.
Yes there are daddy long legs in Wisconsin.
You would have to be a little more specific. If you purchased a long rifle from him while you were in Wisconsin, any sort of receipt of sale will suffice. If you purchased a handgun, NFA weapon, or did not actually go to Wisconsin (bought it online, for example), then you need to find an FFL licenced dealer to receive the firearm for you. Your dealer will charge a receiving fee (usually between $20 - $40), and a copy of their FFL will have to be sent to the seller. The seller will then ship it to your FFL (Type 1 or Type 2 only) dealer, and you will fill out the BATFE Form 4473 at the dealer's when you go to pick up your firearm.
Forever. But what you can do is ask for a release of lien from the dealer. Once you get a release of lien from the dealer, you go threw the normal titled process in your state to obtain a lost title.
30 days, I believe (with temporary tags from Dealer)
The dealer has 45 days to turn your paperwork in to the DMV. If you have a dealer tag, they must provide a SC tag on or before the 45th day. At this point it is out of the dealers hands. The day they get your tags, the SCDMV sends it to Columbia for processing (having the title put in your name) and it can take another 45 days before you get it in the mail.
How long would it take to drive from Cleveland, Ohio to Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin
Contact the dealer nearest you and as long as the radio is original they can give you the codes.