ChatterBank6 mins ago
Car Ownership
36 Answers
I bought a car in November as I am learning to drive. The car is in my name, so too is the log book and the monthly payments are coming from my bank account. The car weas jointly insured but is now only insured in my ex-girlfriends name. My ex-girlfriend has the keys to the car. What can I do to get the car back?
Answers
Talk to her & ask for the return of the keys, advise her if she still will not hand them over you will be contacting the police. ( Does she have any money involved in this car?) If so, different situation.
18:10 Thu 21st Jul 2011
twr - he clearly states he has taken out the credit agreement. it doesn't matter if his gf has paid for all of it or 2p of it. it's in his name, therefore his responsibility - the same as a credit card would be! you wouldn't turn round to your credit card company and say 'oh, my mum spent that £500, so you ca chase her for it. ridiculous! x
Then you have got to talk to her and come to an agreement, but if you want the car and she agrees you are going to have to meet 100% of all future payments, hopefully you can negotiate to keep the money she has already paid you as she has had full use of the car during that time. Alternatively she pays you a lump sum, repay the finance and get yourself another car.
It is not theft. She took it with your permission under agreement that she paid half the finance. You have now changed his mind (understandable) but she has not given any indication that she will not continue to pay. This sounds to me like the only option you have is to stop payment and the finance company will reposses the only problem being you too will end up with a bad credit record or sort it out with her. Have you even approached her about this?
If the relationship has broken down irretrievably, you clearly cannot continue to in practical terms, share ownership of a car. One of you is going to have to buy the other one out and assume full ownership (whether officially with HP company's agreement or unofficially by your own agreements provided you trust one another). The alternative is to sell the car and start again from scratch each though it's unlikely to have much if any equity in it.
To be fair to the girlfriend, bad credit rating or not it appears she has indeed paid half or near as damn it half of the costs over the time they've had the car. I don't see why she should just "give it back" either. Nor should she have exclusive use of course.
To be fair to the girlfriend, bad credit rating or not it appears she has indeed paid half or near as damn it half of the costs over the time they've had the car. I don't see why she should just "give it back" either. Nor should she have exclusive use of course.