Yes if it was recently found and you wish to reclaim it. However if you have waited 45-60 days the impound has filed a storage lien and you no longer have a right to the vehicle. You can however go to there public auction and bid on the vehicle to try and purchase it back from them in which case it is not necessary to transfer the title.
In some states there is an Affidavit of owner dying without a will that has to be singed and notarized to get the title transferred.
No. You'll need a current registration or a title.
It's still your car as long as you pay for it. You are expected to pay impound to get it back.......................but they have the title
With a warrant or with reasonable cause, yes.
If you live in Detroit, they will cause that car to disapear, and never be seen again.
the book of plasms
The owner is the person listed on the certificate of title. If you need to dispute that it's too late. It usually must be disputed in court and that takes time- all the while impound fees will accrue.The owner is the person listed on the certificate of title. If you need to dispute that it's too late. It usually must be disputed in court and that takes time- all the while impound fees will accrue.The owner is the person listed on the certificate of title. If you need to dispute that it's too late. It usually must be disputed in court and that takes time- all the while impound fees will accrue.The owner is the person listed on the certificate of title. If you need to dispute that it's too late. It usually must be disputed in court and that takes time- all the while impound fees will accrue.
I sold my car two weeks ago and now I get a storage notification from the police.
Your grammar is incomplete and so are your sentences so it is very difficult or impossible to answer your question. My question to you is: If you were paying on a car without having it, it must have been in police impound. Was it in impound? your answer will influence my response. If it was in an impound lot, you talk with the party receiving your payments to get it released. If you had the car in use and you want the title after making all the payments, the financial institution you were making the payments to will send you a title that is stamped over the proper section "Paid in Full". You take this title you your county title office and they will issue a new Title with you listed as the owner. This can be used for license plates. But again, it is very unusual for someone to make payments without having the car because they depreciate too fast.
No, but what you will do is invalidate your plates, and if you get caught driving it, or you park it on a public roadway, etc., then it goes into impound, and, if you don't get it out of impound soon enough, the agency which put it there puts a lien on it, and that lien will take precedence over any other claim to that vehicle's title, and so the pawnbroker will either have to eat that loss, or they'll file a lawsuit against you.
Cannot be answered because the reason for the impoundment is not disclosed. However . . probably not - ESPECIALLY if the vehicle was seized as the result of a narcotics confiscation.
No. It is not a proper noun. It is only capitalized when found in a title or is being used as a proper noun.