Yes, joint ownership. It can read John Doe and Mary Doe, or it can read John Doe or Mary Doe. If it it titled "and", both parties share ownership jointly and both signatures are needed to transfer title. If it is titled "or", either party can transfer the title, without the other owners consent.
yes it can. and in order to sell vehicle, both people with name on title will both have to sign in order to release vehicle.
No, not for purposes of legalizing the car with the state or province you're living in.
Not without the other title holder's agreement.
yes
Not in NY state. Others may be different. Check at your DMV.
The lender will probably insist that all names on the title also be on the loan, but not the other way around.
No, if your name is one of the two on the title. That makes the car as much your property as it is theirs. If you intentionally deprive them of the use of the car by hiding or destroying it, then it becomes a civil matter - not criminal.
The estate has to settle the title. The secondary person can be held responsible for the loan until it is resolved.
NONE on the loan.
Yes. How many names are on the title and/or the loan means absolutely nothing... so long as there is a lien on that vehicle, that lienholder is the sole lawful owner of that vehicle, and can repossess it as recourse for delinquent payments.
A lien on a car title most typically means that money is still owed on the car. When a person takes out a loan on a car a lien is put on the title until the full repayment of the loan.
sign the title over to the person buying the car
A title loan is also known as car title loan. It is a type of secured loan where you can use your vehicle title as collateral to get the funds you need. When you borrow with your car title, you allow the lender to place a lien on the title of your car, SUV, RV, truck, or motorcycle in exchange for a loan amount. This loan don't rely on your credit score.
You can cosign but both names will be on title.
Depends on wheter both your names are on the title or not.