If the insurance company agrees you can sign an exclusion which would be a legal document stating that you will not allow your 17 year old to drive any vehicles in your home or possession and that if they do drive such a vehicle you agree that the insurance company is in no way liabile for any damage done and that no coverage applies from your insurance policy.
Some insurance companies should offer partial year coverage. If you can't go this route, you can either cancel insurance or put it on hold during the off-season.
If you owed money on the car (which is probably why it was repossessed), you need to pay what they demand. Check the paper you signed when buying the car if you think they are 'demanding' something different than you signed. Your girlfriend was smart to cancel the insurance, since a repossessed car does not need insurance. You cannot sue your girlfriend for calling the car lot, or for cancelling the insurance, because you cannot show DAMAGES to yourself.
As long as you have the title that he signed off of it and you signed on and you have insurance on the vehicle it will be covered.
When an insurance company pays off a totaled car, they pay the fair market value based on the condition of the car prior to the accident. In other words, you are entitled to enough money to buy a similarly priced, comparable car. This may or may not be the exact same model and year.
It depends where you bought your car.
If the car is paid off, then only liability insurance is needed. If it is not, then you will need a full insurance coverage plan.
You must have auto insurance before you drive the car off the dealer's lot.
no
Stolen car that claim was paid off by the insurance company. The car was later recovered. Because the claim was already paid the car is owned by the insurance company and they will typically sale these at auction.
You need insurance the very moment you drive the car off the lot.
I have taken my caroff the road for the winter. Do I still need to pay insurance
Sadly, that's not going to be an option for you. In Maine, the law requires that all drivers have basic car insurance.