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Yes, but the buyer cannot drive away with it until the title is signed over. You can seal the deal by giving him a bill of sale which is legally binding if you both sign it. This ensures the buyer that the deal has been made and the title is his once it arrives.
if da buyer does not get da title in their name legally is not ders
Turn it in?? YES sale it to a dealership? YES, IF they pay it off. make payments on the rest?? Maybe, the way to do it is to find a buyer(highest price you can get), subtract what you can get for it from the PAYOFF on the loan, BORROW the difference needed from another source. Then you can payoff the loan, get title to give to buyer, and make payments on a smaller amount that you can handle. This will have to be done with the LENDERs help. Contact the lender and make all the arrangements ASAP after you find a willing and READY (CASH wise)buyer. You will have to convince the lender that you HAVE a buyer and convince the buyer that they will get title,ect to make it work. Good Luck
The buyer.
You cannot return the vehicle for a refund. Unless you signed the title when you bought the vehicle, you really can't be sure the dealership had the title. The title may have to come directly from the state issuing the title. If you bought the vehicle used, there may have been a payoff on it and the title will have to come from the lender of the previous owner. If you bought it new, they would have to send the MSO to get the license plates and it will come from the state agency of motor vehicles. The dealership does not supply the title of a vehicle. If not purchased from a private party or in some cases, paid for in full, the buyer must take all the information, bill of sale, and so forth to the DMV, register the vehicle, pay sales tax and licensing fees, and a title will be mailed to the buyer with the lender shown as lien holder or a clear title, meaning the vehicle is solely owned by the person(s) whose names are shown on the title itself.
Take the title, yourself and the buyer to your local DMV. They will take care of everything.
The dealership should have a trade-in authorization letter so you can get the car title when you pay off your loan. If not, you would just write that you are giving permission to get the title for a trade in.
The title will go to the address that is on the contract. Usually it is the primary buyer. You can call the finance company and ask for the Title department and request them to send the title to an alternate address.
Not sure but i think can't transfer real estate title insurance to buyer
Generally, the necessary title work is ordered by the buyer's attorney and paid for by the buyer.
Yes, the co buyer can have their name removed from the title. You can go to the title office and have it removed.
Say "we had a unexpected change in the title & that we now have a new opening in the title"