You should be more interested in your liabilities. If the other signature was forged then the loan is a criminal matter. You will need to explain why you co-signed a forged loan document and who took the money.
None
You need a lawyer to protect your rights.
It depends on what the title says. The title can say "The owner of the vehicle is Name 1 or Name 2." If the title says this then the cosigner has limited rights to get the car. Whoever has the vehicle can sell the car without the cosigners signature. Now if the cosigner has the car, the cosigner can sell the car without the main owners signature. If the title states Name 1 and Name 2, then you have same rights as the main owner of the car. This means if Name 1 trys to sell it, they can't sell it without your signature.
The co-buyer of a vehicle has equal rights to the vehicle if there name is on the title. The co-buyers rights can be defined by a written or verbal contract.
A co-signer is fully legally responsible for the debt of the loan if the other person on the loan fails to pay as per the signed loan contract. All rights and responsibilities are in the contract.
No, a company cannot take money from you if a forged note was used by another person. The responsibility lies with the individual who used the forged note. You should report the incident to the police and seek legal advice to protect your rights.
Whoever is named on the Certificate of Title has rights in the vehicle.Whoever is named on the Certificate of Title has rights in the vehicle.Whoever is named on the Certificate of Title has rights in the vehicle.Whoever is named on the Certificate of Title has rights in the vehicle.
the bank or lien holder will have more rights
Unfortunately, when you cosign you are actually "the lender" of the money you loaned out from your banking institution and you are 100% responsible for that. Cosigning is cosigning and it doesn't really matter what contracts you set up between the two of you. If the contract wasn't done by the banking institution or a lawyer it is null and void. If this person fails to make payments you have every right to the vehicle and do what you want with it but, you must pay off the total amount (including penalties) of that debt. You have the choice of selling the vehicle and paying off what you can on the loan, or you can keep the vehicle. Marcy
Only if you are the spouse of the person listed on the title. Otherwise you have no rights to this vehicle.
You rights are to GET IT BACK, PP is not subject to the security interest on the car.
Not usually, once you are the owner of a vehicle and the previous owners name is not on the title, they will usually have rights to that vehicle.