Yahoo Answers is shutting down on May 4th, 2021 (Eastern Time) and beginning April 20th, 2021 (Eastern Time) the Yahoo Answers website will be in read-only mode. There will be no changes to other Yahoo properties or services, or your Yahoo account. You can find more information about the Yahoo Answers shutdown and how to download your data on this help page.
Trending News
Abandoned vehicle question that Y!A felt it should delete.?
The original owner of a vehicle sells it to another person. This person does not register it in his/her name, but leaves it in the owner’s original name, transports the vehicle across the state of Virginia, and then “abandons” it in a storage facility. This storage facility then lists it as abandoned. The VDMV contacts the original owner and notifies him/her of the location of the vehicle.
When the original owner contacts the jerk about the vehicle, He refuses to discuss it without the title. The location is 5.5 hours away from the original owner and the individual is too stupid to understand this and still demands to see the title.
The person holding the vehicle can sell or scrap the vehicle, probably making a nice profit off of it by listing it as abandoned, assuming the site is legitimate to being with. The location the person claims is the storage facility is, by photos, a vacant lot. Since this person refuses to confirm the VIN of the vehicle, who put it there, or any other information, including value, liens, condition, and so on, there is no way to verify it is not a scam. (Note, after this was deleted by Yahoo, I’m starting to think that the storage provider IS a scam and will notify the owner/police of this).
Does the storage facility have the right to refuse to talk about a vehicle to the “legal” owner? Is the “legal” owner responsible for the vehicle since s/he didn’t put it in storage? Finally, what would you do in this situation?
1 Answer
- Brother HesekielLv 77 years agoFavorite Answer
The "legal" owner is the owner who purchased the vehicle from the person in whose name the vehicle is titled. As the new owner, he's required to put this vehicle in his name within a certain amount of days (depends on the state). If he doesn't, he already violated VA law unless he's a registered dealer. So what the new owner has to do is title the car, then drive to the storage facility, pay the fees, and get his vehicle out. The guy who sold the vehicle hopefully filled out and mailed a release of liability to the DMV, so he's out of the picture.
Source(s): An immigrant from Europe, I now live on the American Rivera in the charming old mission town San Buenaventura and work as an attorney in Santa Barbara, Calif.