Jacques Roland
New member
What is the name of your state? Massachusetts
I would like to provide a car for one of my family members to drive and use as their own, but I would also like to able to potentially recover a portion of my "investment" should things go awry, i.e. family member is unable or refuses to pay me back. I understand never to mix family with business, and I totally understand and am willing to accept a "total loss" on my car purchase if push comes to shove. Nevertheless I am not in the spirit of just giving away expensive things for "free" and would like to keep the semblance of responsibility for as long as possible (family members pays me "monthly payments" to pay back the cost of the car purchase). My other goal is to minimize my own liability/risk so I do not have to insure the vehicle or be responsible if my family member gets in a car crash, etc.
That being said, is the following scenario legally possible? Do I need a lawyer to draft a loan/purchase contract?
1. I find a vehicle and purchase it in cash. No lien, no loan. Vehicle is initially registered and insured in my name.
2. I decide to "sell" the vehicle to my family member. To finance the vehicle from me, I offer to "loan" them the money. They agree to make monthly payments until the vehicle is paid off.
3. Family member is now the "owner" of the vehicle after the purchase sale. Vehicle is registered in their name and in their insurance.
4. I am the "lien holder" ? In case of non-payment, I am technically legally allowed to attempt to recover the vehicle (enforceable by a smalls claims court?).
5. Does the car insurance company need to know about this situation at all?
6. I am fully aware I am still at risk of losing my initial investment (the purchase of the car). Family member might die, refuse to pay back, or court could somehow deem the agreement not enforceable when I try to collect (which hopefully never happens). But I still want a way to recoup my investment rather than just "give the car away."
The simpler alternative is just to gift the car to my family member and hope they send me monthly payments in good faith...
I would like to provide a car for one of my family members to drive and use as their own, but I would also like to able to potentially recover a portion of my "investment" should things go awry, i.e. family member is unable or refuses to pay me back. I understand never to mix family with business, and I totally understand and am willing to accept a "total loss" on my car purchase if push comes to shove. Nevertheless I am not in the spirit of just giving away expensive things for "free" and would like to keep the semblance of responsibility for as long as possible (family members pays me "monthly payments" to pay back the cost of the car purchase). My other goal is to minimize my own liability/risk so I do not have to insure the vehicle or be responsible if my family member gets in a car crash, etc.
That being said, is the following scenario legally possible? Do I need a lawyer to draft a loan/purchase contract?
1. I find a vehicle and purchase it in cash. No lien, no loan. Vehicle is initially registered and insured in my name.
2. I decide to "sell" the vehicle to my family member. To finance the vehicle from me, I offer to "loan" them the money. They agree to make monthly payments until the vehicle is paid off.
3. Family member is now the "owner" of the vehicle after the purchase sale. Vehicle is registered in their name and in their insurance.
4. I am the "lien holder" ? In case of non-payment, I am technically legally allowed to attempt to recover the vehicle (enforceable by a smalls claims court?).
5. Does the car insurance company need to know about this situation at all?
6. I am fully aware I am still at risk of losing my initial investment (the purchase of the car). Family member might die, refuse to pay back, or court could somehow deem the agreement not enforceable when I try to collect (which hopefully never happens). But I still want a way to recoup my investment rather than just "give the car away."
The simpler alternative is just to gift the car to my family member and hope they send me monthly payments in good faith...