if you hide the car and they can't find it, they want do any thing but look for the car consistance for about 60 days and stop for about six months, and start looking for the car again ...in about after nine months most car company stop looking for the car...and will but this on your credit report...if you keep the insurance up on the car they probably will stop looking...and write it off.
If there was any fraudulent information on the credit application, the loan may be in default. Check the loan agreement and the credit application for terms of default/recision.
The loan company takes the car. You loose it unless you make up the missing payments and pay the fees.
If you don't pay a loan when due, you default on the loan.
Any default on any loan will damage your credit in the future.
Yes. The terms of the loan were defined when you signed the paper. Most loans state that they can repo the vehicle if the loan is in default and they can declare the loan to be in default at any time after you have failed to meet one or more conditions of the loan. When you didn't pay on time, you were in default. Once you were in default they can repo the vehicle and sell it to dispose of the loan.
Yes. That's why the credit union has possession of the title. If you used the car as collateral for a loan and default on the loan the lender will take possession of the car and sell it to offset what you owe on the loan.
yes, it is a default on a loan
Registration of the vehicle has nothing to do with the loan or financing of the vehicle. The only was to "default" is to not make the payments.
Auto finance companies are very leary to lend to people that owe the government, so the answer is most likely no. Yes of cours you can get car loan if a student loan is in default there are many online sources which provide car loans for students.
You didn't have the title to begin with. The loan company or bank does. So, you didn't loose it, but you may loose the car since it is in default . The loan company/bank owns the car, not you.
Typically you need a car with insurance to get a title loan. If your car is totaled, the loan company are entitled to that money since they hold the title for your car.
The creditor reposseses the car, and you take the bus.
It is possible; Wisconsin is a self-help repossession state. Hiding the vehicle is called hindering repossession and is comparable to auto theft. When you purchase a car by loan, you do not technically own the car outright. You own it cooperatively with the loan provider. When you default on your loan, you give up the rights you had to the vehicle, and via lien law, the loan provider now owns the vehicle. Therefore it is not yours to hide.
If there was any fraudulent information on the credit application, the loan may be in default. Check the loan agreement and the credit application for terms of default/recision.
The loan company takes the car. You loose it unless you make up the missing payments and pay the fees.
If you don't pay a loan when due, you default on the loan.
Any default on any loan will damage your credit in the future.