Yes.
It's primary.
The person who's name is on the Title is the owner of the car.
The primary borrower may be WILLING to take responsibility, but most likely the lender will not think he is ABLE to make the repayment. That's why he needed a cosigner in the first place. There is a difference in being responsible for a debt and being legally liable for one. The primary debtor may be responsible, but signing a contract as a co-signer makes you legally liable for that debt as well. Credit grantors are in the business of extending credit. They are adept at evaluating risk. When you co-sign for someone, you are taking a risk that a professional lender was unwilling to take. This is why credit grantors make high-risk consumers get a co-signer in the first place, so they will have someone else who "can not get out of it" and will pay the debt.
wisconsin had the first primary election
Wisconsin was indeed the first state to require a direct primary for an election. Robert LaFollette, Wisconsin's governor at the time, successfully advocated for this system.
Why did Governor Robert M. La Follette establish a direct primary in Wisconsin?
In a few states both the primary borrower and the cosigner must be notified by the lender through a "Right To Cure" notice before repossession action can occur. In Wisconsin a replevin order is necessary before a repossession can take place, but the cosigner is not always notified. In the majority of states the lender does not need to give either the primary or the cosigner notice of repossession action.
No, when the parent cosigned the loan, they agreed to pay what the child couldn't. * Yes, the contract that was cosigned was between the borrower's and the lender. A cosigner has the legal right to file suit against a primary borrower for financial damages incurred due to the primary borrower defaulting on the contract.
You can have another person cosign for that person. As long as your the primary you wont need her to get her off the lease.
50/50 split. None more none less.
Meet.
hold primary elections :)