From experience, yes, you do have the right to get your belongings out of the car. You must first contact the repossession company and find out where they are holding your car.
Second, you must bring a photo ID and in most cases, money for a fee that they charge.
Third, they will have you sign a paper that you obtained your belongings and send you on your way. You must do this before they auction your car off. If you don't, your things are gone forever!
Yes you can retrieve personal belongings from your car if it gets repossessed. By law you are allowed 7 days after your car gets repossessed to retrieve your personal belongings.
no
No that's called stealing.....
You are allowed to remove personals that ARE NOT attached to the vehicle. The license plates stay with you, not the vehicle.
They take out the personal belongings. This includes the tags. Check with the repo company or lender for that stuff back.
They cannot hold your personal belongings. They might have a time frame of when they have to get it to you though. When a car is repossessed it is brought to the repo yard and then inventoried for belongings. There are usally several hundred cars at any given moment in a repo yard. All vehicles must be inventoried.
CALL the LENDER who had it repoed. they know where it is.
No. It is called theft by conversion.
* You have to contact the storage yard immediately. * If you have proof of ownership take it with you. (You might not need this.) * If you have proof that the car is registered in your name take that with you. * The storage yard should not charge you for holding your belongings if you have contacted them immediately. They might charge you some fee if they have to go to some trouble to get your belongings.
Yes, you are entitled to get your belongings out of the vehicle, but you will need to check within your state's laws to see if a company can charge you for retrieving your items.
In Ohio...they are required to give back your personal belongings. This does not include anything that is a permanent fixture on/in the car...like a stereo system or rims. If they refuse to give back your personal belongings...I would contact an attorney and pursue legal action.
no