No, Not unless you used one of the other cars as collateral for the loan that bought the car the was repossessed. Then they can take the collateral too.
Then they will repossess the wrecked vehicle, sell it for what they can get, apply that to the loan balance, and you will be responsible for the balance on the loan. They will sue you in court to get it and will win. Now if you continue to make the loan payments, then none of this will happen. Did you not have insurance on this vehicle?
They could never start moving - their wheels would keep spinning while the vehicle remained stationary.
It would be in your best interest to try and negotiate something with your creditor. What will probably happen if they repossess your vehicle is that they will auction it off to the best bidder in an attempt to recover what you owe on the car. If the best bid does not cover the debt you owe, they will come after you for the balance. So you will be stuck paying the balance on a car that you don't even have anymore.
No.
Depend on whether the state is a community property state.
Almost anything can happen.Almost anything can happen.Almost anything can happen.Almost anything can happen.
The lender will eventually repossess the car.
The person driving the vehicles fault. Should have been paying attention and be alert for anything to happen at anytime.
Do you have a contract with a "repo clause" in it? Anything about what will happen if the debtor is in DEFAULT? Do you have the means to actually repo a car? truck, tools, location of the car, etc? Does your state require a "right to cure" notice? Lots of variables here.
People who drive vans take up half the road and are reckless drivers. As for people who drive rusted vehicles they endanger their lives and the lives of the people who chose to ride with them, because rusted vehicles are death traps waiting to happen and you will certianly die if the rusted vehicle is in a wreck!
This depends upon which state you are in. Almost all states require liability insurance on vehicles that are registered for road use. Some states, like California, closely monitor electronically which vehicles have current insurance and which ones do not... and the ones that do not get a hefty fine for every day the vehicle is uninsured. Some states are not so proactive.
The duration of Anything Can Happen is 1.78 hours.