Zigner
Senior Member, Non-Attorney
No based only on this transfer. A gift return, yes...but not tax. (Federal)BTW, you may well owe gift tax.
No based only on this transfer. A gift return, yes...but not tax. (Federal)BTW, you may well owe gift tax.
Look lady ~ an expert you certainly are not; because if you were, you would have notice that you posted to a thread that is nine months old. Why don't you bring out the cheese for your whine in a more recent posting.This chick is crying here, looking for help and chodes just keep saying messed up stuff. She paid over sixty grand for a car and it was stolen. Don't you think that is a little extreme of a karmic punishment for trying to drive on a revoked license? What would you do without a license? Exactly, you would drive too, work, school, your mommies house, wherever you NEEDED to because even though your license was revoked you would NEED to go places.
Seriously though, take it to the judge, your friend -who will get hers some day- has to prove you did anything illegal and if you play your cards right it will just look like she is trying to defame your character in order to keep the car for free. Hire a lawyer, give them everything you have on paper. Take it to court. The worst that can happen is that you lose and you might win. If you just give up you will never see the car again and you will always wonder, maybe even regret not doing anything. Even if you don't succeed in getting your car back you can try.
So let me get this straight, just in case I missed something. You agreed to sell your friend a car. She was going through the loan process for it and since you couldn't drive anyway and you are such a good friend you went ahead and transfered the title to her so she could get tags and have transportation. Then, after you transfered the title she reneged on the deal and kept the money from the loan? Sound about right...?
“CLEAN HANDS DOCTRINE - Under the clean hands doctrine, a person who has acted wrongly, either morally or legally - that is, who has 'unclean hands' - will not be helped by a court when complaining about the actions of someone else."What I did was wrong but what she did was wrong to.
I recommend the bus.This chick is crying here, looking for help and chodes just keep saying messed up stuff. She paid over sixty grand for a car and it was stolen. Don't you think that is a little extreme of a karmic punishment for trying to drive on a revoked license? What would you do without a license? Exactly, you would drive too, work, school, your mommies house, wherever you NEEDED to because even though your license was revoked you would NEED to go places.
The friend doesn't have to prove a damn thing.Seriously though, take it to the judge, your friend -who will get hers some day- has to prove you did anything illegal and if you play your cards right it will just look like she is trying to defame your character in order to keep the car for free.
No lawyer will touch this.Hire a lawyer, give them everything you have on paper. Take it to court. The worst that can happen is that you lose and you might win.
What a comforting thought that will be while staring out at the yard wondering who was going to get shanked today.If you just give up you will never see the car again and you will always wonder, maybe even regret not doing anything. Even if you don't succeed in getting your car back you can try.
First, try not to teach people how to commit fraud here. We keep things nice and legal.So let me get this straight, just in case I missed something. You agreed to sell your friend a car. She was going through the loan process for it and since you couldn't drive anyway and you are such a good friend you went ahead and transfered the title to her so she could get tags and have transportation. Then, after you transfered the title she reneged on the deal and kept the money from the loan? Sound about right...?