No car dealers will ever take a car without having the title for it. Because if they take it and you dont give them the title then they cant sell it.
A reservation of title can be used for any LLC, for-profit corporation, limited liability partnership, limited partnership or investment trust title. Names can't be restricted to nonprofits or trade names just before filing the documents.
They will not take the no title car on trade.
You can only trade in a car that has clear title. Depending on the dealership, it may work to bring the owner of the car with you to sign off on its being a trade. Or, get the title changed at the DMV into your name before shopping for a car. If this is your wife's car, think twice about doing it without her involvement.
You will have to get a duplicate title from DMV
You can trade it in but the dealer will have to pay it off before consumating any deal he has with you. Charging it off does not relieve you of the debt nor does it erase the lien on the title.
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.
Yes. You must transfer the title.
If you have the title signed by the registered owner, you can usuall get away with it but it is usually easier to bring the title holder to the trade in
Its original title was the U.S. Tariff Commission; it received its current title in 1975.
Not if your name isn't on the title.
If you and your deceased spouse were listed as "OR" on the title, it only takes on signature to release the title to the new owner. However, if the names were listed with "AND", then both signatures would be required. Since this is no longer physically possible, you need to take the title, along with the certificate of death, to the motor vehicle office and have your deceased spouses name removed from said title before you even attempt to sell or trade in this auto.
No. Every vehicle has to have a title , I believe after 1972. The vehicle cannot be transferred unless there is a clean title to it.