The person who the car is registered with. You are paying for a car you don't own.
I believe in certain states yes due to the fact that you don't own the car, the bank or lean holder does.
You should speak with the manager of the finance company and explain that you are willing to pay the car off and keep your credit in good standing.
It means you have to get the money to pay for a car, often by getting a loan if you don't have the money yourself.
Depends on the car dealership in itself and where the lady signed the contract from
You have to look at the papers that you sign with the car dealer. Typically they make you sign an agreement to bring the car back in the event that they can not get you financed. If they did not have you sign something, then they will probably hold the note themselves and then you have to pay the car dealer. But the short answer is yes, you can not keep the car if you can not pay for it.
You have very few rights. You agreed to pay for a car that is not yours. Your name can only come off the contract IF the finance company agrees, and they have no reason to agree.
She still has to pay with the car working or not.
The insurance company will pay the finance company not you.
The amount you owe on your old car is added to the loan on the new car,and that finance company is suppose to pay off your old loan.
Unless your name is on the vehicle or you reside in the apartment in which you co-signed, you have no rights in the state of California. If your name is on the car or home, then you can take possession and pay the note.
Paying for another person's car doesn't give you any ownership rights in that car. It simply makes you a volunteer- a nice person who volunteered to pay someone else's car expense. If you wanted rights in the car then you should have made that part of the deal. You should have insisted that your name be on the title as joint owner before you paid the bill.If you buy a car and register it in another person's name for some reason then that other person is the legal owner.
you make him pay it or else you will need to pay it.
Definitely you can finance a used car with no or bad credit. Actually it is very easy these days. The reason is most of the used car dealers and used car finance offer it because your used car is a collateral until you pay off the loan.
Deal with it. You failed to pay that note, the finance company reclaimed their car.
Whichever method suits you better.
YES, IF you have a large D/P, any buy-here-pay-here lot will finance you.
I believe in certain states yes due to the fact that you don't own the car, the bank or lean holder does.