Yes. You will be served with an order to appear. On your court date, you will be ordered to surrender the vehicle and the lender will be given a replevin by the court. This is in essenece an order by the court for you to return the vehicle to the lender. When the replevin is served, you will surrender the vehicle or you will be taken to jail and remain there at least until the vehicle is surrendered, perhaps longer on felony charges.
They do not have to notify you. You have no legal rights regarding car.
You have the right to think before you decide to take full responsibility for another person's loan. Did the lender have your current address? Usually, the lender will try to make the co-signer pay if the loan goes into default. However, if the lender didn't have your contact information it could not notify you of the default. You should have been monitoring the repayment of the debt since you guaranteed it. You could consult with an attorney to see if you had any rights that were violated under your state laws.You have the right to think before you decide to take full responsibility for another person's loan. Did the lender have your current address? Usually, the lender will try to make the co-signer pay if the loan goes into default. However, if the lender didn't have your contact information it could not notify you of the default. You should have been monitoring the repayment of the debt since you guaranteed it. You could consult with an attorney to see if you had any rights that were violated under your state laws.You have the right to think before you decide to take full responsibility for another person's loan. Did the lender have your current address? Usually, the lender will try to make the co-signer pay if the loan goes into default. However, if the lender didn't have your contact information it could not notify you of the default. You should have been monitoring the repayment of the debt since you guaranteed it. You could consult with an attorney to see if you had any rights that were violated under your state laws.You have the right to think before you decide to take full responsibility for another person's loan. Did the lender have your current address? Usually, the lender will try to make the co-signer pay if the loan goes into default. However, if the lender didn't have your contact information it could not notify you of the default. You should have been monitoring the repayment of the debt since you guaranteed it. You could consult with an attorney to see if you had any rights that were violated under your state laws.
Contact the attorney general or check their web site for the consumer's rights in your state. Give the lender a copy. Notify the attorney general of their activities. Make it clear to the lender that he is giving up his right to collect the debt when he breaks the law. That will get his attention. Many loans have a three day right of recision (you can back out within three days). If it is required for your loan and you didn't get it, the lender is sort of screwed.
what is the police rights? the police rights is to be truth in what are they saying and be honest not getting money in all people
CA is full of things to notify debtors about. That's one of them. Check this link:http://www.ca.gov/state/portal/myca_search_results.jsp?BV_SessionID=@@@@1129268743.1112971363@@@@&BV_EngineID=ccchaddefgfeeedcfngcfkmdffidfnf.0&sSearchString=repossession
No. Plessy v. Ferguson, (1896) sanctioned racial segregation by declaring "separate but equal" facilities constitutional. Miranda v. Arizona, (1965) requires police to notify suspects of their rights.
No, your rights come from legislatures and charters (that the police policies must follow).
Yes, police in Michigan read Miranda rights. Reading Miranda rights is a national precedent. This means that all police in the United States read them.
Unfortunately, if you failed to file court papers to stop the bank from repossessing your property, then shame on you. You could have stopped the bank from repossessing your home by taking them to court. In answer to the question above, once the bank takes your property you no longer own the house or the property. You will put out on the street and the house sold to another buyer. You no longer have any rights to the house or the land if you own both.
police power might violate privacy rights
As the co-signer of a loan you have more obligations than rights. You have signed a contract with the lender promising that you will pay the loan. If the person you co-signed for doesn't share your address (so you can monitor the account) you should ask the lender to notify you immediately in the case of a default. You should make the payment that has been missed and then seek reimbursement. Any default on the loan will affect your own credit record and if the other co-signer doesn't pay you will be held responsible for full payment of the balance due.
The lender has the right to receive all the payments. A co-buyer has no rights TO the payments.The co-buyer is equally responsible for making the payments.The lender has the right to receive all the payments. A co-buyer has no rights TO the payments.The co-buyer is equally responsible for making the payments.The lender has the right to receive all the payments. A co-buyer has no rights TO the payments.The co-buyer is equally responsible for making the payments.The lender has the right to receive all the payments. A co-buyer has no rights TO the payments.The co-buyer is equally responsible for making the payments.