A married couple in most states.
The person with their name on the title legally owns the car. Bottom line.
Yes as long as the person who owns the title is there at DMV when transfers it.
Whoever owns the title to the vehicle is who owns it.
The other person needs to sign it over, selling his/her share of the car basically.
If a person's name is listed on a title, that person owns the car. If a person merely cosigned the note, that person's name will not be on the title. If you own the car, you certainly can take physical possession of it.
The owner of the car is the person listed on the Certificate of Title.The owner of the car is the person listed on the Certificate of Title.The owner of the car is the person listed on the Certificate of Title.The owner of the car is the person listed on the Certificate of Title.
Simple, the title holder, provided the title is in that person's name. Possession may be 9/10ths of the law, but possession is only possession. Ownership is another matter. If you have a title in your name, and someone else has your car and will not give it back-- well, you cannot steal your own property. Just don't enter a structure to get it.
The person who's name appears on the title is the legal owner of the vehicle.
the person whos name is on the title inless you had it noterised than you retire all responsibilitys
The purchaser.
If the car is registered in the husbands name only, she cannot register the car. The person who owns the car has to register the car, as the Title office needs a picture ID.
Whoever is named on the title is the owner.