Yes. A charge off does not mean that the debt is not still valid and subject to collection by any means available to the lender.
Not if you are on the title to the vehicle and own it. Whoever holds the loan on the vehicle can repossess the car however if you are late with payments. Contact the lender and work something out. You do not want your car repossess. Credit will be ruined for 7 years, and you will still have to pay the repo fees plus the difference in the balance on the note and what the car brings when they sell it.
YES
They sell the vehicle for what they can, then charge the remainder to you. They usually sell that debt to a collection agency, and the agency starts calling you for that money.
It will depend on a number of things you did not mention 1) the state 2) the type of loan ( is the vechile used as the collateral on the credit line) If you are uo to date contact the bank. Let them know what is going on and they may ( again, depending on the state) pick up the vehicle for you, at a nominal charge.
The state doesn't repossess your car - private companies do that on behalf of the lienholder. They don't charge you for private property left in your car when they repossess it - that would be illegal. They charge a "storage fee" for the items they remove from your car. Underhanded, yes, but they can legally do it.
If the lein holder didn't authorize a repossession can the person of ownership take charge and collect the vehicle, even if it's paid on time but both parties on reistration are no longer in agreement?
typically it is depending on how much the bank or lien holder is willing to pay...usually though....$200.00...to whatever amount they are willing to pay for premium vehicles and trucks
Yes, along with all other costs of the repo.
No. Most (99.9%) of the lenders require you to maintain Comp.& collision Ins. on the vehicle the money was loaned for and secured by. If you fail to do this the lender can, and in most cases, will put this Ins. on the vehicle and you will be charged. The charge for Ins. placed on the vehicle by the lender will be quite high, and it is then added to your payment. If you get your own Ins., the lender will cancel the ins. they placed on the vehicle.
They don't charge you for your personal belongings.. they charge you a storage fee. Yep, it's 100% legal.
Yes. What happens is that they auction the vehicle. They can auction a vehicle 10 days after they repossess it, not before. They take that money, apply it to the loan. Whatever balance is left is what you are responsible for. One thing you can question, is what the vehicle is auctioned for. They have to make every reasonable effort to sell it for book, they just can't sell it for $10 if it is a $10K vehicle, if you know what I mean. There are guidelines that they have to adhere to.
The annual fee of a credit card is a charge applied once yearly. This charge is the cost of having the credit card. There are many credit cards available that do not charge a fee. The credit cards that do charge a fee often offer rewards, like travel.