Nope.
ONLY if you can find someone to buy it without a title. NO buyer, NO seller.
yes
Yes, they can. The car, while the finance company holds a lien on it, is the property of the finance company. As the person who damaged the car and brought it in to be repaired, responsibility for the bill falls on you.
not without legal cause
Yes, at any time and anywhere
Three payments
Impossible to say without knowing whose retirement this is about.
That is the only way you can repossess a vehicle. Repossession comes under the UCC which grants a lienholder the right to repossess but only if they have perfected their lien by filing it on the title. One caveate is in most states the lienholder can not repossess a vehicle that is under a mechanic's lien without first paying that lien.
You can contact the human resources department of the company where the past employee worked to inquire about their pension plan or retirement benefits. Alternatively, the employee may have kept documents related to their retirement that could provide helpful information.
Yes...thats what repo-men do.
ESOPs, employee stock ownership plans, are a retirement plan where employees are allocated shares of the company they work for into their retirement account. When the company does better and increases in value, so does the employee's retirement account. There is a direct correlation to company performance and employee rewards. Research (see NCEO, ESOP Association, ESCA, Verit website, or other) has shown that companies with employee ownership out perform companies without employee ownership. Employees feel like their contributions make a difference, productivity and morale improves.
As soon as you have defaulted on the loan, a creditor can repossess your car. So 24 hours after you have failed to pay, they can repossess your vehicle without notifying you.