Illegally, yes. Legally, no.
You can do a title search at the Department of Motor Vehicles .
Even leased cars must be registered to the leasee. You must go to your local department of motor vehicles to have your vehicle registered.
legally registered vehicles are required in most states to have insurance. go through your state motor vehicle agency. and put aside time.
Yes. Insurance follows the car not the operator. If your son has insurance, you and your vehicles' insurance would be primary (if he were operating your vehicle), and his would be excess if your coverage is exhausted.
At your local motor vehicle department - this is where all vehicles, motorized or non-motorized that travel upon the public roadways must be registered.
The cosigner on an automobile loan is not the person who has to pay for insurance on the vehicle. The registered owner should pay the fees for insurance. However, it is the cosigner's responsibility to make sure the registered owner is carrying insurance for the vehicle.
This depends upon which state you are in. Almost all states require liability insurance on vehicles that are registered for road use. Some states, like California, closely monitor electronically which vehicles have current insurance and which ones do not... and the ones that do not get a hefty fine for every day the vehicle is uninsured. Some states are not so proactive.
If you are certain of the state where the car is registered then the information should be available from the state motor vehicles department.
You would have to find out what state the vehicle was registered in (which you can do through services such as Carfax), then you would have to contact the Department of Motor Vehicles for the state the vehicle is registered in - however, this is no guarantee that the information wouldn't be confidential, and wouldn't require a court order for them to release it to you - you'll need to contact the appropriate DMV office for an answer on that.
you have ten days from the original date of purchase to have insurance and have the car / vehicle registered in your name you have ten days from the original date of purchase to have insurance and have the car / vehicle registered in your name
SR-22, or state by state variants, is the only reason you would have to get insurance to get or renew your license or vehicle registration, except for the state of New York, which all vehicles must be insured to be registered.
The Department of Motor Vehicles is used for many purposes. The DMV as it is also called, serves as a place for vehicle registration, licensing, and almost anything involving motor vehicles.