This is typically called "Grand Theft Auto." As a responsible citizen and owner of the property, you would required to report the vehicle stolen, and press charges against the thief.
As the parent, you might want to give your child a warning that you are about to take this course of action, and give him a short time frame in which to return the vehicle. If he refuses at that point, it would be his 5-20 years to sacrifice.
Added: The above is absolutely accurate, and the sooner you report it the better for you. If he uses the vehicle in the commission of a crime or gets in a collision in which major property damage or injury or death are caused, the law (and the insurance companies) will assume you gave him permission to be operating it.
a title takes how long to come back
bank takes back
You should be OK.
I don't think you can the car is still in your name ,and anything that happens to it will always come back to you.
If they do not register the car in their name then if the car is wrecked or used in a crime then it will come back to haunt you
When the internal combustion happens inside the engines cylinders, a "by product" is made. This is called exhaust. An exhaust system takes that from the engine out the back of the car through metal piping.
The underaged driver's parents are responsible for the damage to the car.
Usually you still get towed. The tow company will still need to be paid regardless.
A recovery agent is a person who repossesses or takes things back for financial institutions. If a person is financing a car and quits making their monthly payments, a recovery agent may come and take the car from the person and give it back to the finance company.
As long as it takes to get it back.
It will always come back to the driver. Even if you borrowed the car off someone, and there was a problem with the car, it is the drivers responsability to check the vehicle before driving it. If there was a brake failure due to poor maintenance or something it might be able to come back on the owner, but 90% it will be the driver that is responsible.
The person who bought the car didn't make payments so the bank takes it back.