You are here:
Forums
Smart Shopper
Questions About Private Sale Transactions

236 messages, Last post on Nov 20, 2009 at 5:18 PM
You are in the Smart Shopper Forum. Your Hosts are kirstie_h & tidester
|
Replying to: manku (Feb 09, 2008 8:58 am) But, other than wheels/tires, what parts would he take off of it that would be missed? I mean, the car is totalled. I assume its not driveable. So would anyone really miss a short shifter or CAI? I would tell him to bring over his wheels and tires and you'll give him your stock ones. Everything else he should just pull off the car and hold onto it. No need to mention anything to the insurance company. Heck, even if by some chance they say something, my response would be "gee. must have been knocked off in the accident. maybe its out there on I95." If he doesn't come through with the purchase, you could either sell your car with those aftermarket wheels or sell them separately and buy new stock wheels for yourself and possibly come out ahead (assuming the aftermarket wheels are more expensive). |
|
|
|
|
Replying to: manku (Feb 09, 2008 8:58 am) Besides, the insurance company doesn't want his car. He could easily buy it back from them for 10-13% of the total compensation. Then he could strip off the parts at leisure and junk the car--perhaps not for what he paid, but not too much less. So he's not being entirely up front with you here. I wouldn't let anyone lay a finger on your car until it's paid for. |
|
|
Replying to: Mr_Shiftright (Feb 13, 2008 6:52 pm) He calls me today and I tell him I need to be protected - $1000 deposit, and copy of drivers license, pink slip and all his insurance contact information (farmers). He is going to scan and email tomorrow morning. He wants to swap out parts, farmers picks up car, then sends me check. He says farmers is settling for 22k+, and will pick up car later this week. What is my financial risk? If he disappears, can't I just say the car has been stolen (which it has). I'd like to dump the car - it needs new tires and brakes (that $1K), and buy a new one. I won't get close to this price on a trade in. Thanks again.
|
|
|
Replying to: manku (Feb 13, 2008 8:56 pm) |
|
|
|
|
Replying to: manku (Feb 13, 2008 8:56 pm) And what if someone screws up your car removing parts and then says "oh we don't want it, it doesn't run right?"
|
|
|
Replying to: Mr_Shiftright (Feb 14, 2008 3:15 pm) This is not the insurance companies first rodeo, they know how the car is equipped. They people good money to make professional evaluations of these cars, along with pictures. I think you are asking for trouble myself. |
|
|
|
|
Replying to: middleageguy (Feb 01, 2008 6:36 am) |
|
|
|
|
Hello, I need to sell my car. My question is this...my car is financed, so I don't have the title. I need the money from the sale of the car to pay off the loan to get the title. Can someone please tell me what the process should be in a private sale? I mean...will a buyer give me the money without me giving him/her the title right away? Can I even do that legally? This is my first car so I'm very new to all of this..thanks for anyone who can help. Thanks |
|
|
Replying to: thejax2006 (Feb 28, 2008 9:33 am) tidester, host SUVs and Smart Shopper |
|
|
Replying to: thejax2006 (Feb 28, 2008 9:33 am) This becomes more difficult when you are trying to sell a car that has a lien. You basically have two options. You can: a.) Borrow money from a personal source (dear ole dad), pay off the loan, get the clean title, sell the vehicle using the regular transaction process, pay back d.o.d. out of the proceeds. or, b.) You have to orchestrate a three way 'closing', between you (part owner), your bank ( where you have the loan, the other part owner), and the buyer. You'll undoubtedly end up faxing and notarizing paperwork back and forth, and this becomes a real pain. The bank will also have to give you a "payoff amount", as of a specific date....which is the amount of the check that they will get to close out the loan. At 'closing' there will be two checks cut (or deposits into your respective accounts), one will go to the bank who originated the loan, and the remainder will go to you. If you call the bank, their loan department can help you with this, and give you some guidance as to how they handle it in your geography/state. It is much easier to do this when the buyer is a dealership, carmax, or some other company which does this all the time and have administrators that orchestrate all of this for you. They also are willing to absorb a little of the risk as a purchaser, and have a good sense when all the paperwork appears proper. Just put yourself in a buyers shoes....no way would you be willing to turn over a check to someone, without immediately getting all of the supporting paperwork that shows you have purchased the vehicle and will ultimately be able to get a title issued in your name from the DMV. Dear ole dad, really makes life simpler if at all possible....and hopefully you are close to the end of the loan where the payoff amount isn't that much to begin with.
|
|
You are here:
Forums
Smart Shopper
Questions About Private Sale Transactions
New? Join Now!
Forum Tools
Search Forums
Browse by Vehicle
2010 Ford Mustang



Browse by Board
Browse by Topic
Today's Chats