Who owns your car?
Kneale Brownson
kneale at coslink.net
Fri Sep 30 14:44:52 EDT 2005
Maybe your state laws differ regarding titled ownership???? Does the bank
own the property that it provides mortgage money for in your state?
Here, nobody but a dealer can sell a car unless their name is on the title.
The bank can't auction a car unless it holds the title. An insurance
company can't auction a car unless it holds the title. Bank can't
repossess the car if the loan is current. If the bank refuses to give you
the keys, I'd call the cops. And ask the lawyer (to whose office the car
was supposed to be delivered) to take the person who delivered it to the
bank to court.
At 01:38 PM 9/30/2005 -0400, Mike Arman wrote:
>
>
>
>Had an interesting conversation with a large, well known nation-wide
>megabank today.
>
>
>Seems there's this car they financed - and that's the end of the simple part.
>
>
>The payment is current (nothing due), but the owner is deceased (two
>weeks), therefore the car is part of the estate.
>
>
>The person who was driving the car (acquaintance of the owner) took
>it to the bank and dropped it off, taking the license plates with
>them. They were specifically instructed (by registered letter) to
>take the car to the attorney's office, but took it to the bank
>instead. (Separate cause for action, not pertinent to the rest of this.)
>
>
>I'm trying to recover the car so the estate can sell it - it is
>upside down in the loan (loan is about $4K more than value), but if
>the bank sells it at auction, they'll get nothing for it, and the hit
>against the estate may be $10 to $12K instead of $4K. Obviously worth
>someone's time to do this . . .
>
>
>The bank's position is that THEY own the car, not the estate, and if
>anyone wants it, the loan has to be paid off in full.
>
>My position is that the estate owns the car (is in title), and while
>yes, there is a valid lien against it held by the bank (which we are
>not contesting), as long as the payments are kept current, they
>should release the car since they do not own it, the estate does.
>
>Their response was that in *all* car loans, it is the LENDER who owns
>the vehicle, and title does not pass until the loan is paid off. I
>disagree. While the lender does have a valid claim against the car,
>and the car is the collateral for the loan, the OWNER is the person
>whose name is on the title.
>
>(They would be slightly more correct in a buy-here-pay-here loan
>situation, but this is a standard, good credit car loan.)
>
>You might want to check YOUR car loan documents (their suggestion!)
>to see who exactly IS the owner of "your" car - hopefully the bank is
>wrong, and we will be spared an extremely unpleasant surprise. (Hey,
>Mr. Banker, if you own it, YOU fix it!)
>
>None of us want this car, but I'm trying to keep the heirs from
>getting screwed over by this megabank.
>
>
>Best Regards,
>
>Mike Arman
>V8Q, it isn't a car, its an ADVENTURE!
>
>
>
>
>
>--
>No virus found in this outgoing message.
>Checked by AVG Anti-Virus.
>Version: 7.0.344 / Virus Database: 267.11.9/116 - Release Date: 9/30/2005
>
>
>_______________________________________________
>quattro mailing list
>quattro at audifans.com
>http://www.audifans.com/mailman/listinfo/quattro
More information about the quattro
mailing list