โDec-29-2018 02:09 PM
โDec-30-2018 08:07 PM
โDec-30-2018 03:40 PM
T18skyguy wrote:mich800 wrote:T18skyguy wrote:
The language used was "all property on the defunct business is assigned to the lienholders"
That sounds like part of a financing statement or collateral agreement. There is way too much missing in that statement to mean anything. The biggest being what consideration was given to transfer ownership. They may have actually sold the unit to the dealership and they agreed to payment after they get paid but that is not consignment that is a sale. In that case they are an unsecured creditor.
There we're 30 of them, and they we're on consignment for sale. I actually knew one of the individuals. I know that the dealership was hundreds of thousands in debt. Perhaps they declared bankruptcy. They closed and chained the gates and not a single owner was allowed on the property. They lost their rigs. I'm not a lawyer, so you guys tell me how that could happen. One other thing I remember, is the rig owners had a legal right to get paid, but it all went to satisfy the senior lien holders, and there was nothing left in the kitty after the seniors got paid.
โDec-30-2018 03:23 PM
mich800 wrote:T18skyguy wrote:
The language used was "all property on the defunct business is assigned to the lienholders"
That sounds like part of a financing statement or collateral agreement. There is way too much missing in that statement to mean anything. The biggest being what consideration was given to transfer ownership. They may have actually sold the unit to the dealership and they agreed to payment after they get paid but that is not consignment that is a sale. In that case they are an unsecured creditor.
โDec-30-2018 01:59 PM
rockhillmanor wrote:T18skyguy wrote:Mbiviano wrote:T18skyguy wrote:
When you consign a rig, you are actually transfering ownership to them. Keeping the title doesn't matter. Rigs on consignment are considered assets of the business.
I'm not discrediting your specific situation, but this statement is generally not accurate with consignments. Are you legal savvy enough to share what would be different with RV consignments than regular consignments?
You don't need to be legally savvy when you see it with your own eyes. I witnessed this in Madison Wisconsin. I put up a thread on it on an RV site, and people in a handful of states responded that it was also the law in their state. I talked to the people in Madison that lost their rigs. Some had the titles, some didn't. It didn't matter. In the signed contract ownership was transferred to the consignment dealer. Perhaps this is not true in every state, but I'm certain it is in some. Another one being Arkansas I think. The language used was "all property on the defunct business is assigned to the lienholders"
I sold my RV in Wisconsin just outside Madison and that was "not" the case. Perhaps it was a County law and/or pertinent to the specific dealer how they were doing business. And if the RV had a lien on it. In my case my RV was paid for.
โDec-30-2018 01:16 PM
T18skyguy wrote:Mbiviano wrote:T18skyguy wrote:
When you consign a rig, you are actually transfering ownership to them. Keeping the title doesn't matter. Rigs on consignment are considered assets of the business.
I'm not discrediting your specific situation, but this statement is generally not accurate with consignments. Are you legal savvy enough to share what would be different with RV consignments than regular consignments?
You don't need to be legally savvy when you see it with your own eyes. I witnessed this in Madison Wisconsin. I put up a thread on it on an RV site, and people in a handful of states responded that it was also the law in their state. I talked to the people in Madison that lost their rigs. Some had the titles, some didn't. It didn't matter. In the signed contract ownership was transferred to the consignment dealer. Perhaps this is not true in every state, but I'm certain it is in some. Another one being Arkansas I think. The language used was "all property on the defunct business is assigned to the lienholders"
We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.
โDec-30-2018 12:59 PM
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There is no charge unless we sell your RV. When your RV is sold, our commission is only 10% of the actual selling price. The minimum commission is $1475 for motor homes and $975 for travel trailers and 5th Wheels. There are no storage fees charged during the term of the listing agreement. We ask for 90 days to properly market and advertise your RV to our existing and new potential buyers. We look forward to working with you on the sale of your RV.
โDec-30-2018 10:40 AM
T18skyguy wrote:
The language used was "all property on the defunct business is assigned to the lienholders"
โDec-30-2018 09:52 AM
โDec-30-2018 08:34 AM
Mbiviano wrote:T18skyguy wrote:
When you consign a rig, you are actually transfering ownership to them. Keeping the title doesn't matter. Rigs on consignment are considered assets of the business.
I'm not discrediting your specific situation, but this statement is generally not accurate with consignments. Are you legal savvy enough to share what would be different with RV consignments than regular consignments?
โDec-30-2018 07:43 AM
T18skyguy wrote:
When you consign a rig, you are actually transfering ownership to them. Keeping the title doesn't matter. Rigs on consignment are considered assets of the business.
โDec-30-2018 06:49 AM
We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.
โDec-29-2018 07:41 PM
โDec-29-2018 06:15 PM
โDec-29-2018 04:35 PM