No if the cosigner is not list on the title. However you cannot sell the car until the loan is paid off and you get a lien release. The person was good enough to cosign the loan for you taking a big risk so you should be good enough to discuss this with that person.
If the title is in his name. What if the tittle is in both of there names? We are wanting to trade off our two cars but we have a co signer who we are no longer speaking to. We are wanting to trade both cars in on one and we are wanting to lower our payments. What do you think? Could we go back to Toyota where we bought them? Trade both in and then get one lower payment if the deal works on with the dealer? We have 2 2005 cars and would to trade on 1 2004 or 2005 car. What do you think?
The loan would have to be paid off. Finance companies don't let signers off the hook for anything less than fraud or death. If there is a second signer you can enourage them to refinance to pay off the original loan and get a new loan for the vehicle in their own name, or to trade in for another vehicle that they alone sign for. If either of those isn't an option and there is no fraud and hopefully no one dies - all signers are in for the long haul.
In most cases, you cannot trade a vehicle without the co-signer's signature if they are listed on the title or loan agreement. The co-signer has a legal stake in the vehicle, and their approval is typically required for any transaction involving the vehicle. It's important to check with your lender and local laws, as requirements may vary.
Trade
A no-trade clause requires a player's consent before a trade involving that player is made. If a player has a no-movement clause, the player cannot be traded, waived, or sent down to the minors without that player's approval. In both cases, however, a player is not protected from being bought out by the player's current team.
Benjamin Rush: This is not true. Benjamin Rush was a staunch opponent of slavery and the slave trade.
i had bought some fair trade oranges and it was £42 its lovely
Nobody bought them, there are farms in Egypt that make the grains, they trade the grains for items.
Only if they are also on the title of the car. Call the Bank they will explain you what to do in certain situation. I got a same issue I called a bank and they offered me a back message.
it depends on how much you have used it, how much the price was when you bought it, when you bought it, where you bought it, and i am giving a guess of no more than $250
A lot of them bought trade items to be taken to Africa, to be used in trade for slaves.
no you can not trade them because you bought those credits at the store with your money so they will not let you trade it.