The other person needs to sign it over, selling his/her share of the car basically.
It depends on how the veting was formed, if it was a Joint Tenancy with rights of Survivorship, the rights to keep the house is automatically transfered to the surviving Joint Tenant as long as that person can afford to continue to pay the mortgage payments. There are several types of vesting and you cen discuss this will your title company when you close the deal. If you want to transfer your rights to your heirs, their is also one that covers that. Glena
Sometimes, it depends on where you bought it. I would ask the person you bought it from.
In most states, you would have to retitle the car, the question is, can you get the other person to sign off of the current title. Go to a place that gets car titles for you and ask them in your state.
Joint tenancy is actually a term involving ownership of property. The two most common legal forms of property ownership involving two or more people are as "joint tenants" or as "tenants in common." Spouses of one another generally take title as joint tenants, because on the death of a joint tenant the surviving joint tenant automatically becomes the owner of the property. If they had been tenants in common, the deceased person's share would have formed part of the deceased person's estate, which might not have been left to the surviving tenant in common.
If the only assets owned by the decedent were joint accounts then those accounts would be owned by the surviving joint owner. Real property, if not held in a joint ownership with right of survivorship, would need to be probated to vest title in the heirs.
Joint tenancy is actually a term involving ownership of property. The two most common legal forms of property ownership involving two or more people are as "joint tenants" or as "tenants in common." Spouses of one another generally take title as joint tenants, because on the death of a joint tenant the surviving joint tenant automatically becomes the owner of the property. If they had been tenants in common, the deceased person's share would have formed part of the deceased person's estate, which might not have been left to the surviving tenant in common.
Generally, the person who's name the car is title in has to file for a lost title. There is a fee. You would need to contact the person who sold/gave you the vehicle.
The title would be held as tenants in common unless a joint tenancy was set forth in the will.
This joint allows for slight movement. A good example are most of the spinal vertebrae. A person with more movement would be rather unstable.
Why would you waste your money trying to get something from a person that that person does not have.
Just the way you've done it! "The Story Title" by John Doe
that would just make it easy for him to go and have the title transfered into his name after you take back possession of the vehicle and then report it stolen. which means you would be charged with grand theft auto/receiving stolen property, which is a felony. if it was stated in your divorce decree that he is awarded possession of the vehicle, then it is something that you would have to take to court. i would recommend contacting an attorney to find out the laws on this. there may be a statute of limitations on how long he has to transfer a title.