In order to do a car transfer from a parent to a child, the parent must sign over the car to the child. There must be a smog certification and a transfer fee must be paid.
no specific age, but if your planning on leaving your child in a car, your an awful parent
If the title is in the child's name, the child is the legal owner and the parent cannot take the car, regardless of who pays the insurance.
In most cases, a minor cannot finance a car on their own because they are not legally able to enter into a contract. They would typically need a co-signer, such as a parent or guardian, to help them secure financing for a car.
They can gift a car, but they can't write it off.
Yes, a 17-year-old can finance a car with the help of a co-signer, typically a parent or guardian, who will be legally responsible for the loan if the teenager is unable to make payments.
no
Unfortunately, the parent (s) of the child are liable for the damages to the car, since they're fully responsible for the child's actions.
If they are the child's legal parent yes. The only way that they might be unresponsible is if the other parent had sole physical and legal custody. If they have joint custody but the child lives most of the time with the other parent they are still responsible.
In most cases, a 16-year-old cannot finance a car on their own because they are not legally able to enter into a binding contract. They would typically need a co-signer, such as a parent or guardian, to secure a car loan.
Rental Car Finance Corp. is a subsidiary of rental car company Dollar Thrifty Automotive Group, Inc. (parent company of Dollar Rent-A-Car and Thrifty Car Rental). Essentially, it finances the cars DTAG uses in their fleet at corporate locations across the country.
If they have Power of Attorney, yes.