You need to bring a lawsuit and ask the court to order the title be transferred to you. You need a copy of the note that you signed and proof you have been making the payments and for how long. The lender must be in possession of the Certificate of Title. You will need a court order to transfer the title to your name with the help of the lender and it will be up to the judge.
You need to bring a lawsuit and ask the court to order the title be transferred to you. You need a copy of the note that you signed and proof you have been making the payments and for how long. The lender must be in possession of the Certificate of Title. You will need a court order to transfer the title to your name with the help of the lender and it will be up to the judge.
You need to bring a lawsuit and ask the court to order the title be transferred to you. You need a copy of the note that you signed and proof you have been making the payments and for how long. The lender must be in possession of the Certificate of Title. You will need a court order to transfer the title to your name with the help of the lender and it will be up to the judge.
You need to bring a lawsuit and ask the court to order the title be transferred to you. You need a copy of the note that you signed and proof you have been making the payments and for how long. The lender must be in possession of the Certificate of Title. You will need a court order to transfer the title to your name with the help of the lender and it will be up to the judge.
You need to bring a lawsuit and ask the court to order the title be transferred to you. You need a copy of the note that you signed and proof you have been making the payments and for how long. The lender must be in possession of the Certificate of Title. You will need a court order to transfer the title to your name with the help of the lender and it will be up to the judge.
Yes.
Cosigning for ANYONE is one big mistake. If the person you cosign for is not making the payments then the person that cosigned is responsible for all payments. I have no idea why anyone would want to do this. Unless there were stipulations in the contract you signed with the buyer, then no, they can't just up and sell the car. Take another look at your contract. Marcy
YES, you can include it whether the payments are current or not.
The finance company will be coming to you for payments...even if he has the car. They will send repo men after the vehicle as well. Good luck. Never EVER co-sign for anyone.
Call your banker ASAP. Explain the situation and ask for advice.
CALL THE LENDER. They can advise you and work with you.
Contact whomever holds the lien, they will allow you to make payments and take posession of said vehicle if signor has ceased to make payments. I have already contacted the lien holder and they advised me that they would not get involved with me taking possession of the vehicle. All they wanted from me were back payments. I brought the payments up to date. Now I want to get the vehicle in my possession. Unfortunately I have been unsuccessful at contacting the person I cosigned for. I've even heard that he may have moved out of Michigan. I have a copy of the Michigan registration showing myself as an owner. I am currently awaiting documentation from the state that I am on the title. What is my next step towards getting possession of the car?
If you're asking whether the vehicle can be repossessed for non-payment, it can, regardless of who's supposed to be making payments. Whoever appears on the contract or paperwork for the car is responsible for the payment, regardless of what informal agreements may be in place.
Don't understand what you mean by the phrase, "...voluntary have it returned..." However, as long as the primary indebted party is current in their payments there would be no reason for the loan company to contact you for payments.
Yes..... I did
If you're making payments you signed a contract. When you return your car you've broken your contract. Yes there is consequences when you break a contract.
it doesn't matter if the pope takes over your vehicle payments. if he stops making them, your credit is damaged and the vehicle is repossessed.