The private seller holds the title until paid in full, he should transfer the title to private buyers name and place a lien on title then the title will be mailed back to the private seller and once vehicle is paid the seller signs off on the lien and mails the title to the buyer. A contract/bill of sale should be signed by both parties to the payment agreement established for the protection of both parties.
depends on contract, if your up to date on payments they usually wont. if you pay in full at time of purchase it wont be a problem
What sense does this question make any way.One thing to say just get it in writting and prefferably notarized ok then that way you will not have to worry about he say she say ok.
No, I am not a private party selling a car.
There is no song called "Private Party". However, there is a song called "Party for Two" by Shania Twain, which has the words "private party" in the lyrics.
You can do what you want in that regards. You will still be liable for the payments and the bill will still come in your name. Check with a third party loan company. They may have high interest risk policys they can offer.
Private Beach Party was created in 1985.
Private Party was created on 1990-08-14.
Don't understand what you mean by the phrase, "...voluntary have it returned..." However, as long as the primary indebted party is current in their payments there would be no reason for the loan company to contact you for payments.
Some one is having a party and it is private = Fiesta privada As in a private person (Party of the first part...) = Parte privada
There is no song called "Private Party". However, there is a song called "Party for Two" by Shania Twain, which has the words "private party" in the lyrics.
The People's Republic of China is a single-party state controlled by the Chinese Communist Party. The party holds most of the political power and decision-making authority in the country.
No. You signed agreeing that if they didn't make the payments, you would be the responsible party. You will either have to make the payments or risk collection activity against you as well, including negative credit reporting or suit. You should consult an attorney and find out whether your state's laws would allow you to sue the primary party to recover some of your losses, but you can't get blood from a turnip. Unfortunately, this is the setback with cosigning a loan.