No. The primary insured MUST match who owns the vehicle, otherwise any claims made for that vehicle will most likely be denied.
Depeding on how the vehicle is titled you may have legal rights to the vehicle even if you aren't making the payments. However, in order to just get it titled in your name then you will need their consent if it's currently titled in both of your names. Very simple answer to all these questions. If your name is on the title, you can have the car. If your name is on the loan, you can make the payments. WHAT if BOTH names on tittle, reg and insurance, one is making payments but other is the strong credit that got bike and wants it back
Yes. Any amounts owing.
Not really enough information to answer the question. What was your age when you 'bought' the car? What is your age now? If under legal age - are you legally emancipated? Whose name was the vehicle titled in? Who was the vehicle registered to by the DMV? (????)
Certainly, liability insurance has nothing to do with who owns the vehicle. It deals with protecting the owner of the vehicle if sued as a result of an accident. Collision and theft protect the owner of the vehicle from loss.
If you have its papers I believe so. You have to have information on it and legal papers.
== == Yes. Any vehicle driven on public roads requires you to have insurance. A strictly off road vehicle, as in (Dirt Bike), that is not street legal requires no insurance.
HECK NO, they have lots of legal remedies but that is not one of them.
NO! He is only guaranteeing the loan. He has no legal right to take the car.
Yes, it can if you fail to pay the legal fees or fail to make your monthly payments on a loan.
Driving a vehicle raises the risk of an accident. An accident may damage one's own vehicle or may damage a third party. This may cause financial or legal penalties to the owner of the vehicle. To avoid all or to compensate for the consequences we should opt for insurance. There are 2 types of vehicle insurance. Third-Party Insurance: - Comprehensive Insurance
You need to have a lien on the vehicle and reasonable cause to repo it, whether it be late payments, risk of losing the vehicle in impound, etc.
Some insurance companies like Progressive will cover a non-owned vehicle meaning a vehicle in which you have no legal or financial interest. Check around if your insurance company does not provide coverage to non-owned vehicles.