Unlikely, but contact a local attorney for state/case specific advice. Whose name or names were on the title to the car?
You present proof that the repossession never occured. You can dispute it with the credit reporting agency.
No
The credit reporting companies have a dispute form that you can use to dispute anything that is wrong on your credit report. Ask for this form or send a letter detailing the information in your report and explain why it is incorrect. They will investigate the matter and send you their findings. If it is incorrect they will remove it from your report.
u dont jerkface.
They should.You can dispute it with the credit agency.Send the credit agency a dispute letter .
If it's not actually true, then you can dispute it with the reporting agency. If it is true, then you don't "get it removed." It will be removed after a certain amount of time has elapsed.
It's not possible to make case law without a case in dispute.
A repossession will be reported by your bank to the credit bureaus after your car has been repossessed. Obviously this will drastically lower your credit score if you owed a lot of money and if it was recent. The best thing you can do is contact your bank, especially if you have a good relationship with them and try to work out a deal. If any amount is owed you can use that as a bargaining chip to have them remove the negative listing upon payment. If nothing is owed, they just took your car you don't have much to negotiate with. You can also dispute the repossession to the credit bureaus. You send a dispute letter to them asking for verification on the repossession. They must investigate the item with your bank. If it isn't verified with in 30 days it must be removed from your credit reports. The older the item the better chance of it coming off.
It is always possible to dispute a ticket. That's what courts are for. Go to court on the day and time shown on the ticket and present your case to the Judge. Driving violations are charged to the person actually driving the vehicle.
Yes, it's possible to have them removed if you dispute them.
Yes, but it has to be equally applied to the mother's boyfriend.
Quantum dispute is one where you are trying to figure out how much damage has been done. One party will claim all was done at that time and the other will say it is not possible.