May-06-2016 11:08 AM
May-07-2016 07:50 AM
Grit dog wrote:Aided and abetted by useful posts. 🙂
Another fine topic horse whipped to death by armchair quarterbacks......
May-07-2016 07:18 AM
May-07-2016 06:20 AM
You do not need a license plate to drive a newly purchased vehicle directly home within Michigan within three days of purchase. Carry the assigned title and proof of insurance with you. Never use a plate from another vehicle as a substitute.
May-07-2016 05:58 AM
May-06-2016 09:37 PM
You show up with the title filled in correctly, and you can register the vehicle. Pretty straight forward.
May-06-2016 08:53 PM
May-06-2016 08:47 PM
coolmom42 wrote:
My question is: why has he not titled it in AZ? Is it not being driven? How long has this been the situation? You don't want a van that has been sitting for years.
Quite honestly I've never heard of such a thing as a trip permit.
In TN, this is what you do:
Sign the title and fill in the right information on it. Give it to the buyer. I have also always made out a bill of sale, simple form printed up on PC, 2 copies. Myself and the buyer both have a copy with both signatures. This give the buyer proof of payment immediately, and gives me proof of sale so that I am no longer liable for anything that happens. There is also a form to send to the state, but it takes a while. I want something in hand, with some documentation that the vehicle no longer belongs to me.
In TN no one cares about past registration of the vehicle. You show up with the title filled in correctly, and you can register the vehicle. Pretty straight forward.
Now I still contend that the seller should have taken care of this, but maybe he's just lazy. In that case, it may be a legit deal. But take a very careful double look at the the vehicle. And as always, get a mechanical inspection.
May-06-2016 08:39 PM
May-06-2016 08:30 PM
coolmom42 wrote:Taken care of what? He moved from Missouri to Arizona, he doesn't want to license the van in Arizona since he plans to sell it. That's what I would do. How is this toooo hinky?fla-gypsy wrote:
Walk away from it, if he really wanted to sell it all of that would have been settled previously and you have no way of knowing if it is a scam/stolen/wanted as evidence/etc
This.
Steer clear, this is toooo hinky for an ethical seller. As someone said, he should have taken care of it a long time ago.
May-06-2016 08:29 PM
May-06-2016 08:27 PM
fla-gypsy wrote:
Walk away from it, if he really wanted to sell it all of that would have been settled previously and you have no way of knowing if it is a scam/stolen/wanted as evidence/etc
May-06-2016 06:46 PM
May-06-2016 06:30 PM
May-06-2016 06:23 PM