Thursday, January 12, 2012

Ihave a civil judgement against me in NC, can they take a car registered in Florida?

the sheriff came out and asked if i had the money i said no...he had a list of papers and said its a good thing you havent registered your new car yet, if you had i would have a copy of the registration and would have to take the car...



he said dont register it, and i wont bother you, he then said put your mom or dad on the registration as a "co-owner" and you will be ok...



but since his papers only had NC paperwork, could they take it if it was registered in florida?



i have a florida license but, i can do affidavid of residency for NC because my parents live there...



right now it just has temp plates from south carolina, and i have the bill of sale from the dealer...but...the title is still at the NC dmv awaiting me to register...its a south carolina title in the dealers name still...



is it safe as it is? because its a south carolina car right now? or is because its not in my name?



whats the best thing to do...



1.register in NC with parents names as co-owners

2.register myself in florida

3.leave temp plates



also can his lawyer get me on evasion to pay debt by transfering property?Ihave a civil judgement against me in NC, can they take a car registered in Florida?
Check on the laws in NC and Florida. In some states a car, which you need for transportation to work is not subject to be seized..Ihave a civil judgement against me in NC, can they take a car registered in Florida?
Option 1...or better yet...PAY THE JUDGEMENT....Ihave a civil judgement against me in NC, can they take a car registered in Florida?
As long as YOUR name is on the title, NONE of your options will protect the car. You don't have the option of keeping the 30 day tags. If you don't actually live in Florida, you can't legally register the car in Florida.



IF the Sheriff actually told you what you claim he did, he is a FOOL and should be kicked out of law enforcement for giving advising ILLEGAL action and practicing law without a license.

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