If someone else has power of attorney I believe they can sell the car for the dead person (or a person who cannot think for themselves.)
That would depend upon state laws and how the car is titled. Generally if a vehicle is titled "John Smith and whomever" then the vehicle can only be sold if both agree or by order of the court. If the title reads "John Smith or whomever" the car can be sold by either person. This would not apply in some instances, some examples...pending divorce proceedings, legal action by creditors, or probate procedures, etc.
If the car has never been titled then it can be sold as new. A new car demonstrator or demo will often have as many as 5,000 miles on it and still sold as new.
yes. The person who the vehicle is titled to is the owner of the vehicle.
title jumping is when you sell a car to person a, then person a sells the car to person b. Person a never changed ownership of the title to their name and person b didn't either. which means your still the owner of the car. I had a friend that sold his car to guy, the guy sold the car to a woman. She got into a terrible accident and by law they were responsible for the accident because the titled owner of the vehicle is financial responsible for liability. He had to prove he was no longer the owner of the vehicle.
The titled owner
Possibly, if it hasn't been titled before.
No, you cannot sell a car that is not titled in your name. That would be a crime, transferring stolen property. The car legally belongs to the person whose name appears on the title.
You have to be 16 for a car to be titled in your name.
The insurance should be under the name of the person to whom the car is titled and registered. Also, if the person who legally owns the car is not the person who will be the main driver of the car, the person who will be the driver on the car should be added to the policy.
HAS TIS CAR BEEN TITLE TO ANYONE HAS THIS CAR BEEN TITLED FIND THIS CAR
It has nothing to do with the miles. It has to do with the title. If the car has never been titled it can be sold as new. Typically in the situation of a demo a dealer will put less than 5,000 miles on the car. The warranty is not affected because it starts when you purchase the car not from zero miles but from the miles at that time.
If that car hasn't retitled yet, then it's illegal and if they get caught with it, they will be fined.