Call you shriff's office they will need to come out with you to get the car
Insure?? yes, register? NOT unless your name is on the TITLE.
NO. As the cosigner, you are only guaranteeing the loan.
Yes, you can sell a vehicle that is still being financed. You will need to pay the loan company the balance of the loan with the sale proceeds in order to give the buyer a clear title. If you have to sell the car for less than you owe, you will be responsible for paying the balance out of your own pocket in order to transact a legal sale.
When you voluntarily surrendered your vehicle for repossession, you signed a voluntary release form. The probability of you redeeming your vehicle is extremely remote now. It is possible that if you attend the auction where it is being sold, you may be able to repurchase it though.
The short answer is that the person who is on the policy, must have a financial interest in the vehicle.
The vehicle will need to be refinanced with the lender after probate procedures have been completed. The new owner will then need contact the DMV in their state to obtain information on how to have a new title issued in their name.
The gunpowder was being hidden in the gunpowder plot. It was hidden in a cellar under the house of parliament.
There is only one way: pay the past due balance. You may be able to hide the vehicle for a short time, but repossession drivers are very good at what they do, and the skiptracers who help them are even better. Hidden vehicles are eventually found. No one gets away with hiding a vehicle forever. And, once it is found, it will be taken. Ask yourself, do you want that to happen while you are at the store with three unhappy kids? Picture yourself coming out to the parking lot, little ones crying, tired, ice cream melting, and your car being towed off on the hook of a repossession truck. Pay the past due balance.
Such charges will vary based on the location and what is being financed.
The answer to this question is being sytematically hidden to protect the person.
It doesn't matter how the vehicle is marked or what plates are on it. What matters is the laws of the state in which the repossesion is being performed. The answer is "NO", it is not legal for a repo in Washington to be carried out by an unmarked vehicle. I suggest you speak to an attorney. As of January 2007, a Portland-Oregon based repo company is being sued in Federal court for this same offense, as well as illegal repo, breaching the peace, and assaulting a woman while trying to illegally repo her vehicle.
You are not able to get it when you are not a member. Sorry.