it the title is in your name it is easy, go to aaa file for a duplicate title, go to dealer if it is newer and with title in hand ssee if they can cut you a set of keys. if the car is in your name all you have to do is call the cops and file an "unauthorized use report"
The verb for regaining possession is repossess; the noun form is repossession; the adjective form is repossessed.
Yes. The lienholder is the rightful, legal owner of the vehicle, and can take possession of that vehicle anywhere.
Whomever the lien holder has hired for that purpose. Providing you have defaulted on the payment terms of your contract.
Yes, it is true that the law prohibits another person from signing a contract even if the other individual is handicapped. But if the person that is handicapped re-types the contract and types his or hers signature it's fine.
This will depend on the state laws where the car loan was made. You mention repossess, was the car in your possession while the loan was active or was it being held at their property. The reason I ask is since most Pawnshops are required by law to hold the item, whereas another business, Title Loans are not required to hold the vehicle. Either way, you should have been provided with a contract that would show when the default date is/was. Also in most States both of these businesses are regulated by state laws and would have to abide by these limits. Phil
Read the contract. If the second car is connected to the first, yes. Otherwise, not without a judge signing off.
A subcontractor is an individual or a business that signs a contract to perform part or all of the obligation of another's contract. A subcontract is hired by a general contractor.
ownership
A straw deal in car selling occurs when one individual puts a car in his or her name but another person will be driving it and making the payments. Illegal in most jurisdictions and unwise on the part of the individual signing the contract.
A land contract is just like any other contract, complete with contract law principles. No one can sell the property until either the contract is either fufilled or breached. If it is fufilled, then it becomes the property of the one purchasing the property and after they have successfully completed the contract, they then are free to sell it to whomever they wish. But, if the contract is breached, it is then still the original owners and they can do as they wish, keep the property, sell the property or find another individual willing to enter into another land lease contract. So, while the property is tied up in a land lease contract, no one can sell or buy it until either a satisfaction or breach of the contract is committed.
Possession or thing...
legal proceedings initiated by a creditor to repossess a house or another property due to a loan in default.