โNov-29-2017 06:29 AM
โDec-02-2017 03:29 PM
โDec-02-2017 03:24 PM
jkwilson wrote:True but little satisfaction. While getting hammered (after AG office takes its time finding its hammer) the buyer still does not have title, can't get a plate, can't legally drive it to a campground etc to say nothing of dealing with resultant possible ulcers. Do the darn transaction right. Before parting with your money be sure you are getting everything you're paying for. OP has come back saying the actual seller is an estate. Over my career I can't count the number of times people have been dealing with those nice people handling an estate only to have it blow up in their face because one heir wasn't consulted and decides he/she can't part with dad's car or whatever. And then it seems as though there is general agreement that if a dealer or salesman is talking, they are lying but, in this case, OP's child hands over hard earned, after tax dad's dollars to this person without taking possession of the title half of the transaction???
A dealer selling a vehicle in Indiana that they canโt provide a title for will be hammered by the Attorney Generalโs office.
โDec-02-2017 02:53 PM
โDec-02-2017 06:11 AM
โDec-02-2017 03:52 AM
โDec-02-2017 03:48 AM
โDec-01-2017 03:47 PM
โDec-01-2017 07:29 AM
โDec-01-2017 06:53 AM
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โNov-30-2017 11:58 AM
โNov-30-2017 11:54 AM
โNov-30-2017 11:48 AM
JALLEN4 wrote:
In many cases dealers do not physically have possession of a title or MSO. They are often held by the floorplan source financing the inventory for the dealer. In this case the dealer sells the unit, collects the money, and then pays the financing source and receives the title or MSO. The problem can then start where the dealer uses the customers cash for operating expenses and fails to pay the floorplan source to obtain the title. This is called "selling out of trust" and unfortunately happens several times a year.
If it has truly been several months, the OP's daughter should immediately contact the Indiana DMV and file a complaint. Every state has laws about titles and no state would have laws where the dealer has months to produce a title. This time period is a prima facia proof of a problem. Good luck!
โNov-30-2017 04:11 AM
fj12ryder wrote:avan wrote:Don't be so quick to judge something you seem to know little about. You don't always get a title from the dealer/seller when you buy a vehicle. We just bought a car in Kansas and you pay the dealer and you leave with paperwork, but no title, that comes in the mail after a week or two. We knew that going in, that's the way Kansas does their paperwork.
Not to be unsympathetic but she paid cash and did not leave with the hot little title in her hand? Like she trusted a 'stealer'? By now she's realizing that having the title in hand is as important or maybe more important than having the trailer in her drive. ...
So, no you don't always get a title.