if you are not divorced yes it is unless you have are ready been divorced keep all of your reciepts like money orders or checks with your name to show the judge that you did buy it get with you lawyer and see if he can get your x to agree that that is yours
No. You wanted the custom work; it belongs to you. No one will pay you for customizing your own vehicle.
A repo worker does not normally pick up a vehicle unless he has an order from the lien holder (usually the creditor who financed the vehicle). If you own your vehicle outright with no liens against it, the repo person probably picked it up by mistake.
Then you are running the risk of having elevated insurance premiums, should you ever own your own vehicle and attempt to insure it, and this vehicle/policy has a bad/rough insurance record.
Yes, you can sell a vehicle that is still being financed. You will need to pay the loan company the balance of the loan with the sale proceeds in order to give the buyer a clear title. If you have to sell the car for less than you owe, you will be responsible for paying the balance out of your own pocket in order to transact a legal sale.
== == You CANNOT sell or trade a vehicle that YOU don't OWN, and as long as there is a loan debt outstanding on the vehicle, YOU can't sell it, as it still belongs to the company that LOANED you the money to but it. They own it. If you pay the entire remaining balance to the lender, and get a CLEAR TITLE to it, then you can sell, or trade it to whoever you wish, but not before you pay it off, completely.
No one. He had his own ship and supplies.
your own well-being
Each jurisdiction uses its own form for issuing a divorce decree.Each jurisdiction uses its own form for issuing a divorce decree.Each jurisdiction uses its own form for issuing a divorce decree.Each jurisdiction uses its own form for issuing a divorce decree.
No one. He supplied his own ship and supplies.
eat at your own risk
No one. He supplied his own ship and supplies.
Another fine example of irresponsible behavior by people who use their children as pawns in a divorce. Now you are in the uncomfortable position of either insuring your daughter's vehicle or demanding that the mother keep it in HER name. The daughter cannot legally own a vehicle until she is of age and as such, you are responsible since you have full custody. You would be wise to require that the mother put the vehicle in HER name until the daughter turns 18 and can be responsible for her own vehicle.