Using any standard letter format, the body of the letter should be as follows:
Paragraph 1: State why you are writing, for example, "We are advising you that your (year and model, or other identifying information of the vehicle) is scheduled for repossession."
Paragraph 2: State the basis for the repossession. Include reference to any previous notification you have sent.
Paragraph 2a: (Use only if no previous past due notices were sent) Provide information for how the recipient can remedy the situation to prevent the repossession. Be sure to include a deadline date/time that the remedy must be accomplished.
Paragraph 3: (known as the "call to action" paragraph) For example, "Please contact me immediately at (phone number/email address) if there is an error in our information or if you will voluntarily return the vehicle. If we don't hear from you, the repossession will take place. Thank you for your attention to this matter."
Keep the language professional even if the vehicle transaction was between private parties. Remember, this letter is documentation of your actions as well as a notification to the recipient.
i want to refuse the company for providing services as a panel doctor to a company
They won't repossess it for your license being suspended, but they can repossess it when you fail to make payments, regardless of what the current status of your license is.
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yes because they have to notify the owner
If you aren't paying in full they can repossess the car. To a bank " some sort of a payment " doesn't count. Call them and make arrangements.
The bank's repossession of their house left the family with no place to live.
You call the finance company and state your intent to them. Either they'll send a recovery agent to repossess it, or you might be able to take it to the repossessing agent.
No. The lienholder is the only entity with a right to repossess.
NO!
The DEALERSHIP won't repossess the car, but the lender might if you don't make the monthly payments as scheduled.
Yes, the finance company can repossess the car from the body shop. They would likely wait for the car to be fixed before they repossess the car.
NO, you know when your payment is due. It is listed on the contract you signed. Miss a payment and they can repossess your car then next day.