Paul, as long as there is a lien on the car, it CAN be repossessed. It is up to the lender whether they want to repo or not. Some will, some wont. Your lender can seel the loan to another co. at a discount and the new lender could decide to repo. Good Luck
YES THEY CAN...But do they??? It depends.
There are situations when a person buys a brand new car and does not maintain it properly. Or the car begins to wear a couple yeasr into the agreement. There are situations where a person falls behind on payments because of hard times and certainly cant pay a car loan. Also they cant afford the maintainence on the car so the car breaks down bit by bit to the point its barely driveable or looks very little like the brand new car it was several years ago.
The repo people follow this guy and go to repossess the car and they look at it and call the finance company that hired them. The finance company decides they dont want the car...its in such bad shape...they just want the money. Therefore in some instances they choose not to take the car.
That happened to me back in the late 90's. In 1995 I bought a brand new 95 Hyundai Exel with AC, CD, Cassette, Power Windows, Auto Trans, etc for 7500 dollars. I pail 2000 in cash and financed 5500 dollars. My payments were 135 a month for 5 years. I paid on time and sometimes a few weeks late all along. Once I hit 30 days past due and the phone rang 10 times a day it seemed. I paid up.
Then in June of 1998 I lost my full time job. I had a part time job still and could only find another part time job quickly. With 2 part time jobs I was unable to make ends meet. Plus my live in girlfriend who made over 75000 a year broke up with me and moved out after 4 years. So from May till December I made no car payments in 1998. My long distance phone service was disconnected. I was only having to pay 15 a month for local service. I got food stamps and free electric through public assistance and my church. Plus they also helped pay my rent. My credit cards were insured so I did not have that monthly debt but the intrest accrued on them.
I just refused to answer my phone when it rang and Unavailable appeared on my ID. In January I got a new job making the 30000 dollars a year I made at the job I lost. I then contacted Hyundai and they stated the entire 2000 dollar balance was due. I arranged to pay 150 a month till it was paid off.
They then asked if I made repairs to my car. I said NO I did not have money yet. They stated they went to repossess the car but chose not to because of the moderate body damage, bald tires, cracked windshield, broken headlights, and when they followed me to my home they noticed smoke coming out of my muffler and loud noises and failed inspection sticker. They stated for 150 a month they would not repossess the car as long as I kept paying even if I restored the car. I did fix the brakes, muffler, lights, windshield, air conditioner for about 1200 dollars totally a month later. I kept making payments until the loan was paid off in the Fall of 2000. By 2001 they removed the default on my 3 credit reports. In 2002 I bought another Hyundai this time an Elantra for 10000 with 200 dollar monthly payments. So far I have kept them up.
Still in my personal experience they did not repossess the car due to the poor condition it was in. They found that they could get no money for selling it I guess.
YesYes
no
Whether or not a car can be repossessed after a judgment depends on the judgment.
no
If you have no lien on your vehicle then no one has a legal right to repossess it. If you're not behind on the payments there would be no reason for the lender to reprocess the car in the first place. It is hard to believe you have a loan on a car without a lien. The car stands behind the loan. If there's no lien on the vehicle then the car is not involved in the loan and cannot be repossessed.
hi
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Repossession occurs when the borrower fails to make payments on a loan secured by a vehicle. If "the bank" is not the lien holder then it has no authority to take possession of the car by repossession. However, if a bank obtains a judgment lien against you in court for a different debt, it can use the judgment lien to seize your car, or any other property, to satisfy the judgment.Repossession occurs when the borrower fails to make payments on a loan secured by a vehicle. If "the bank" is not the lien holder then it has no authority to take possession of the car by repossession. However, if a bank obtains a judgment lien against you in court for a different debt, it can use the judgment lien to seize your car, or any other property, to satisfy the judgment.Repossession occurs when the borrower fails to make payments on a loan secured by a vehicle. If "the bank" is not the lien holder then it has no authority to take possession of the car by repossession. However, if a bank obtains a judgment lien against you in court for a different debt, it can use the judgment lien to seize your car, or any other property, to satisfy the judgment.Repossession occurs when the borrower fails to make payments on a loan secured by a vehicle. If "the bank" is not the lien holder then it has no authority to take possession of the car by repossession. However, if a bank obtains a judgment lien against you in court for a different debt, it can use the judgment lien to seize your car, or any other property, to satisfy the judgment.
The lien is valid if due process of law was followed correctly. Meaning the party involved was sued, the plaintiff won the case, was awarded a judgment and executed the judgment as a lien against the defendant's property. During all these legal 'steps' the defendant should have received notification and time to respond. Undoubtedly the lien represents the deficiency and fees incurred when the repossessed vehicle was sold. There might possibly be an appeal on grounds the suit and/or judgment was faulty and therefore the lien is not valid. This requires research as to the data contained in the lawsuit petition, writ of judgment, and any other contributing factors. To obtain copies of the lawsuit and judgment documents the party involved can contact the clerk or administrator of the court where the writ of judgment was issued.
As long as there is a lien on the vehicle the lienholder has the right to repossess the property
YES, after they get a judgment for the amount still owing on the contract. That amount can be applied as a lien against other property you own.
If the civil judgment is due to not making payments for an auto loan on the car that is in question, then yes, that car may be repossessed as a result of the judgment. If there is a judgment against both owners of the car (i.e., if the co-owners are both listed as defendants), then the car is considered an asset and may be repossessed unless there is proof that the car is required for one or all of the co-owners to earn money in order to pay the judgment. If there is a judgment against only one of the owners of the car (i.e., if one of the co-owners is listed as a defendant, but ANY of the others are not), then no, the vehicle may not be repossessed.