Friday, January 8, 2010

Used Vehicle Bill Of Sale Is The "bill Of Sale" Equivalent To The "title" Of A Vehicle?

Is the "bill of sale" equivalent to the "title" of a vehicle? - used vehicle bill of sale

I buy a 1965 Ford Falcon van only to the parties and the owner seems to have lost the title and wondered whether sales will be sufficient account. I wonder whether the contract would be good, or if absolutely necessary, for the title. I am simply the van for parts.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

No, you have the title. Tell the person (the seller) (spending by the state) to $ 10 and a doubles title. Vehicle could be stolen.

Anonymous said...

A purchase receipt is received. When you buy a vehicle, the title proving ownership. I do not know what the consequences would be for you if the vehicle has been stolen, had a bank loan against it, or not in possession of the seller, to him the receipt. The first act does not say if any of these conditions are met.

You better have a receipt for the parties and not a complete vehicle. In this way, would not run into trouble when the vehicle will always be identified and has no title.

Anonymous said...

A purchase receipt is received. When you buy a vehicle, the title proving ownership. I do not know what the consequences would be for you if the vehicle has been stolen, had a bank loan against it, or not in possession of the seller, to him the receipt. The first act does not say if any of these conditions are met.

You better have a receipt for the parties and not a complete vehicle. In this way, would not run into trouble when the vehicle will always be identified and has no title.

Anonymous said...

No, you have the title. Tell the person (the seller) (spending by the state) to $ 10 and a doubles title. Vehicle could be stolen.

Anonymous said...

A purchase receipt is received. When you buy a vehicle, the title proving ownership. I do not know what the consequences would be for you if the vehicle has been stolen, had a bank loan against it, or not in possession of the seller, to him the receipt. The first act does not say if any of these conditions are met.

You better have a receipt for the parties and not a complete vehicle. In this way, would not run into trouble when the vehicle will always be identified and has no title.

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