As long as it was not stolen, yes. just put on the bill of sale "AS IS, NO TITLE. I MAKE NO WARRANTIES OF TITLE, MERCHANTABILITY OR USE." this clears you from having a title and they cannot come back to you saying that you were going to get the title for them. also if they break it when they use it, it says that you wont warranty or fix it.
carry it Unless you also hand-made an engine for the vehicle.
If your name is listed on the Title then you have all rights to posses the vehicle. The loan instrument doe not construe ownership, the title does. Again if your name is on the title and registration you can Take the vehicle or better yet depending on your situation, call the police (with title in hand) and report the vehicle stolen, this can be a very powerful threat to who ever has the vehicle.
A motor vehicle TITLE is good forever, for as long as you own the vehicle. On the other hand the vehicle REGISTRATIONexpires every year. Check the expiration date on your license plate - or the expiration date contained on the registration slip.
A motor vehicle TITLE is good forever, for as long as you own the vehicle. On the other hand the vehicle REGISTRATIONexpires every year. Check the expiration date on your license plate - or the expiration date contained on the registration slip.
Depends on the existing title, if the salvage company owns the vehicle and it does not have a salvage title then they would be just another owner like anyone else and this vehicle would have a clean title assuming that there are no lean holders. On the other hand if the vehicle in question has already received a salvage/non repairable or similar title then salvage/non repairable or similar title would follow the vehicle not a clean title.
Having a title in hand means that the seller physically possesses the legal document that shows ownership of a vehicle or property. It indicates that the seller is legally able to transfer ownership to a buyer.
CA does not record the title number on the CA registration card. The CA title number is listed in the bottom lower right hand corner of the CA title. Vehicle Registration Wizards - www.vehicleregwizards.com
NOMO is not a title-holding state. What that means is: the owner of the vehicle holds the title in hand whether or not there is a lien against it, (unless the lien holder insists on having the title in their possession).
If there is a loan against the car then the bank is on the title and they own the car, your name would be on the registration but not on the title, so yes they can repo it. If you have the actual title in hand then their is no loan on it and you own the car.
CA does not record the title number on the CA registration card. The CA title number is listed in the bottom lower right hand corner of the CA title. Vehicle Registration Wizards - www.vehicleregwizards.com
If the vehicle came from the factory equipped with a left-hand sideview mirror, it must be on the vehicle.
Whose NAME is the title in? Yours, or the dealership's? When you bought the vehicle, the auto dealership would supposedly transfer the title to you, but would also place a "lien" on the vehicle. IF THE TITLE IS IN YOUR NAME, simply tell the dealership to hand it over, and call the authorities if they refuse. IF THE TITLE IS NOT IN YOUR NAME, then you just may have a problem requiring the services of an attorney, assuming of course that you have fully paid for the vehicle.