Simple, the title holder, provided the title is in that person's name. Possession may be 9/10ths of the law, but possession is only possession. Ownership is another matter. If you have a title in your name, and someone else has your car and will not give it back-- well, you cannot steal your own property. Just don't enter a structure to get it.
Not exactly. The person with title to a property is the person who legally owns it. A deed and a title are not the same thing. A deed is a legal document that transfers the title from one person to another.
The person with their name on the title legally owns the car. Bottom line.
The person whose name is on the account owns the money. The bank holds it for them.
The guardian would be holding title for the benefit of the ward IF the property was conveyed properly. For example, "to John Edwards as Guardian of Michelle Edwards". A guardian holds title for a person who lacks legal capacity to hold title but the ward owns the property.
Ownership of real estate is evidenced and accomplished by a deed. The person who transfers the property is called the grantor and the person who receives it is the grantee. In any deed, the grantee is the new owner. The owner of real estate is said to hold title to it.
As long as the finance company holds the title, they effectively own the vehicle.
A married couple in most states.
Yes as long as the person who owns the title is there at DMV when transfers it.
The grantee on the deed is the owner of the property. The grantee(s) on the deed is the person who holds title to the property. If the person who provided the cash to purchase the property wants an interest in the property they must be named as a grantee on the deed or they must have the owner execute a mortgage naming them as the mortgagee that will be recorded in the land records.
who owns this title location of title
The person who's name appears on the title is the legal owner of the vehicle.
Whoever owns the title to the vehicle is who owns it.