Personal Finance & Money Asked on June 17, 2021
I went to a Ford dealership and traded in a slightly older truck for a slightly newer one, and financed the rest.
The next day, my fiancée informed me that the title of the old truck is still on a loan she took out a year ago. We still owe $9000 on the loan. (How and why my title is on someone else’s loan is a long story, but doesn’t matter to the question.)
Now the dealership, of course, wants the title to my old truck. They are not yet willing to say what would happen if I don’t produce it.
What are my options if I can’t produce a title for a vehicle I just traded in? How does my having financed my truck affect this scenario?
The old truck is collateral for a loan. The place that made the loan expects that if you can't pay they can repossess that old truck. If you sell it they can't repossess it.
The dealer needs clean title to be able to buy the truck from you, so they can fix up the truck and sell it to somebody else.
I am assuming the the lender has filed paperwork with the state to show their lien on the title.
Your options are three:
As to option 2: If the deal still makes sense the new car dealer can send the $9,000 to the lender that you forgot about. That will of course increase the amount of money you have to borrow.
You will also run into the problem that this loan that you forgot to mention on your credit application may cause them to rethink the decision to loan you the money.
Answered by mhoran_psprep on June 17, 2021
If your fiancée took a title loan out on your truck you won't be able to trade it in for another vehicle until you pay the loan. The dealer will likely take your "slightly newer" truck back because you won't be able to produce the title for the trade until the other debt is settled.
Title loans are a terrible idea. You should probably try to pay that loan off as quickly as possible regardless, because interest rates are terrible on these loans.
I will update this answer if you add details about the circumstances of the current loan on your truck.
Answered by NL - Apologize to Monica on June 17, 2021
Check the sale contract for your new car. How much did you get for the trade-in? 2000$? 4000$? Pay that money and get the old truck back.
Or tell them to make a new sale contract, without the trade-in.
If they refuse, threaten to go back on the buying. They risk losing a sale and getting back a new car that has suddenly become second-hand and lost a lot of value.
Or just cancel the buying and get the old truck. As other poster says, you should pay the 9000$ loan first, before getting into more loans. New shiny cars can wait.
Answered by Enric Naval on June 17, 2021
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