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I'm in a sticky situation. My ex-husband and I (when were married) filed for Chapter 13. SInce the divorce, I pay half the bankruptcy payment and he the other half. At the time we filed, we included our car payments in the bankruptcy, so until our last bankruptcy payment(which will be in 2 years, the lien holder will still have the title to my car. Since I'm still paying in bankruptcy and the lien holder has my title, I have to pay full coverage insurance(state law-GA). Well my car is finally inoperable and I am paying cash for another. Well it is operable but I refuse to put MORE money into a piece of junk to get it fixed. How do I get out from under paying insurance and registration on the old one without a title? Can I turn the car back over to the lien holder with no further obligation? What are my options?

2007-02-09 08:54:12 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Business & Finance Personal Finance

3 answers

Your lienholder will probably require you to keep insurance on the car. You may wish to contact the lienholder and determine whether you can voluntarily surrender the vehicle. BUT, that could show on your credit report for seven years! You may be able to work a deal to make lower payments on the vehicle or just work out a settlement with the lienholder where you pay a certain amount and they keep the car.
It is NOT fair, but there's not much you can do, whether you are in Chapter 13 or not.
As far as insurance goes, in some states, you can give up your plates and the state does not care about insurance.

2007-02-09 09:04:36 · answer #1 · answered by Chef dad 3 · 0 0

Does GA have a non-op permit for registration? I know in CA you pay a low fee yearly for a non-operating permit in lieu of registration which basically says that you will not drive it and it will not be parked in public. That, also gets you out of paying for the insurance as well. Technically, it just places the reg on hold until you figure out what to do. I know you are stuck on the payment for the car because I'm assuming you reaffirmed the debt, but you might try contacting the trustee and/or creditor and see if you can voluntarily surrender it after the fact. You never know.

2007-02-09 09:05:48 · answer #2 · answered by kenchesluvr 2 · 0 0

right here is my opinion. If the abode has fairness, report a financial ruin 13. If the abode would not have fairness, report financial ruin 7, supply up paying own loan, assemble low fee expenditures and flow on the final achieveable minute.

2016-12-17 06:16:26 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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