Paul Stanley's (KISS) 928 for sale!
#31
Rennlist Member
Wow that guy sounds like a real dirt bag.
Car is still listed.
https://www.kijiji.ca/v-cars-trucks/...ationFlag=true
Car is still listed.
https://www.kijiji.ca/v-cars-trucks/...ationFlag=true
Maybe be one of us could buy the car with 1/2 cash up front and the write a check for the rest?
#32
Chronic Tool Dropper
Lifetime Rennlist
Member
Lifetime Rennlist
Member
Lien laws didn't help you out? In my way-back-when days, the great and socialist republik of Kalifornia had no problem at all placing liens on cars that had escaped without payment. Of course the owner had the option to contest the lien but that required them to show up in court, something most weren't quite ready to do especially if they had written a bad check. Anyway, an unpaid lien was followed by a repossession, which drove up the perp's costs if they wanted the car back. Car would be sold "at auction" at a time and public place convenient to the seller but not necessarily to the owner. Lienholder gets to recover costs including the repossession and impound plus court and legal costs. The if any change goes back to the former owner. If the auction price is less than the amounts owed, the now-former owner is still on the hook for the difference.
Got your paperwork and within your state's statute of limitations period? File now and get an instant judgement. Lien the car, impound it, and let the fun begin!
#33
Lien laws didn't help you out? In my way-back-when days, the great and socialist republik of Kalifornia had no problem at all placing liens on cars that had escaped without payment. Of course the owner had the option to contest the lien but that required them to show up in court, something most weren't quite ready to do especially if they had written a bad check. Anyway, an unpaid lien was followed by a repossession, which drove up the perp's costs if they wanted the car back. Car would be sold "at auction" at a time and public place convenient to the seller but not necessarily to the owner. Lienholder gets to recover costs including the repossession and impound plus court and legal costs. The if any change goes back to the former owner. If the auction price is less than the amounts owed, the now-former owner is still on the hook for the difference.
Got your paperwork and within your state's statute of limitations period? File now and get an instant judgement. Lien the car, impound it, and let the fun begin!
Got your paperwork and within your state's statute of limitations period? File now and get an instant judgement. Lien the car, impound it, and let the fun begin!
#34
Nordschleife Master
Lien laws didn't help you out? In my way-back-when days, the great and socialist republik of Kalifornia had no problem at all placing liens on cars that had escaped without payment. Of course the owner had the option to contest the lien but that required them to show up in court, something most weren't quite ready to do especially if they had written a bad check. Anyway, an unpaid lien was followed by a repossession, which drove up the perp's costs if they wanted the car back. Car would be sold "at auction" at a time and public place convenient to the seller but not necessarily to the owner. Lienholder gets to recover costs including the repossession and impound plus court and legal costs. The if any change goes back to the former owner. If the auction price is less than the amounts owed, the now-former owner is still on the hook for the difference.
Got your paperwork and within your state's statute of limitations period? File now and get an instant judgement. Lien the car, impound it, and let the fun begin!
Got your paperwork and within your state's statute of limitations period? File now and get an instant judgement. Lien the car, impound it, and let the fun begin!
No need for a auction, or the owner 'getting the change'.
Remember Maverick Marcellus? He had a car in a shop that apparently escaped the eyes of the law and didn't go to auction with the rest of his 'ill gotten gains'.
It was put up for sale by the shop owner and Maverick came on here with all sorts of stories, threats, pejoratives towards the shop, even pics of documents that were stamped as 'filed' by a court somewhere or another.
Didn't matter. The shop owner had free & clear title and sold the car.
A friend owns a shop and he's had to do this more than once with a car that had a fairly big bill and an owner that wouldn't pay (he didn't release the car to the customer, so 'finding and repo'ing' wasn't an issue).