You should realize they are the legal owner. There must have been a reason you could not register the vehicle in your own name. You voluntarily listed the vehicle as having another owner and they turned out to be untrustworthy. All you can do is sue them, tell your story to a judge and try to recoup the money you paid for the vehicle. You will need proof of payment and your success will depend upon your evidence and the judge's decision. Lawsuits of this type are extremely common.
If your name is on the title
A title cannot be changed without the owner of the vehicle signing off on the seller line. A title can be transferred and a vehicle registered by a person other than the registered owner in most states.
No. Whoever's name is on the title is going to be on the registration and insurance also. You can pay for the car and title it in somebody elses name, but at that point you've given them a free car, because you have no legal rights to the vehicle at all.
Not unless that other person is there with you.
yes if it is from someone elses work
If someone signs someone elses name on the title that means the title is forged. For example if i sign your name one the title that means its forged. So i advise if someone forges a name on the title call DMV and ask how to apply for a Duplicate Title, the Duplicate title will state that your the original owner of the Vehicle and since the original title has a forged signature on it means its NULL AND VOID, so its good for the garbage So go and get the Duplicate title, that's proof of ownership
NO!!! I think that's illegal unless you have that person with you.
Registration, license plate number and title right?
how much is it to change car titile name
no, buying vehicle from someone who got the vehicle through a mechanics lien
Report it to the police. I'd tell the bank too: the title should be in their name, and if he's fraudulently retitled it, he's stolen THEIR property and they've probably got more expensive lawyers than you can afford.
== == You need to contact the DMV in your state for the correct way to do this.