how can u register a car owned by someone who died?

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#22
Yes CA must be different because title does not need to be notorized. Yes anyone can request title info on a vehicle, but I would suspect that they only give reprint to the owner. Call DMV and find out, there's a number for the North Fresno DMV in the white pages. I would tell them my "grandma" wants to sell her car, but can't find the title. She's real old and asked me to help her out. Maybe they'll let you do the work and mail the title to her. Then she can sign, and you're on your way. This business of forge is really not as big a deal as people are making it out to be. DMV only want's your money. If you pay, they really don't care who signs, as long as it isn't contested. And your not talking about a $60K car here. Trust me, if you want the car with little hassle, call DMV, sweet talk them into letting you request a duplicate title, get it or have it mailed to little old lady, have her sign the name on the title (maybe her own), and it will be fine.

Even if you follow all the rules, in CA you stand the chance of losing if someone contests the sale. I know from recent experience that a clean title and bill of sale, do not make the vehicle automatically yours. At issue here is whether or not she has the right to sell the car. Whether the sig is forged or not, you'll not know that until someone contests. Nobody is going to contest it.
 

Big Daddy

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#23
wileycoyote said:
Dude, don't listen to big daddy, he's probably an attorney or something. The old lady doesn't want to deal with it, so just spend the 10 bucks, get a reprint of the title (which will probably show if there's a lien on it), and sign the dead guy's name. Get a hand written bill o' sales and all will be well. Unless it's stolen, but then DMV only goes back 10 years. Found this out last week when my buddy got a call that LA customs had his motorcycle in impound. His bike was stolen in 1978. Some bike builder bought the engine from a guy in Delano, who bought it at swap meet. Both showed clean title on bike from DMV, but customs, well they never forget. Don't be a wuss, even if it comes back the the sig was forged, they'll have a hard time proving it was you, and really DMV doesn't care that much.
Poor advice, considering he has no interest and nothing to loose should it become an issue!
 
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#24
well ive never had a title notarised when i bought any car, i think it may be diff here in cali..
Have you ever purchased a car from an individual, not a dealer? I have never had to have the title notorized when I traded in or purchased at a dealer, but I have when I have purchase and sold to individuals.
 
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#26
The preceding is provided as opinion only and should not be considerd fact or legal council. Should you choose to take action based on the opions presented above, you do so at your own risk. The advise is not intended to solve medical problems and has not been evaluated by the FDA.

Below is a link to the California DMV websit that addresses the requirements for transfer of title as a gift (original question was receiving vehicle as gift).

http://www.dmv.ca.gov/vr/vr_info.htm#BM2525
 

Big Daddy

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#27
"Family and gift transfers.

The following applies to vehicles which are currently registered in California:

If you acquire a vehicle from your spouse, sibling, child, parent, grandparent, grandchild, or as a gift, you must record this transfer of ownership within 10 days from the date you take possession.
You will need the title, also known as the pink slip, with the previous owner's releasing signature on line one. If the title shows a legal owner, their release must appear on line two.
If the title is lost, an Application for Duplicate Title (REG 227) must be completed and signed. When an application for duplicate title is used, the legal owner's signature must be notarized.
An odometer mileage certification is required if the vehicle is less than 10 years old. If the title does not have a designated space for this information, a Vehicle/ Vessel Transfer and Reassignment Form (REG 262) signed by both the seller and the buyer will be required. The REG 262 cannot be copied. An original must be submitted. To obtain a form by mail, call DMV's automated phone service 24 hours a day, 7 days a week at 1-800-777-0133. To speak to an operator, call between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday - Friday, Pacific Standard Time, or pick one up from your local DMV. If calling from outside the United States, please call 916-229-0370.
You must also complete a Statement of Use Tax Exemption (REG 256), to receive the exclusion from the smog certification and use tax."

Notice that if a duplicate title is used the signature must be notarized?
 
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#28
That will complicate things. But you might get lucky and the spouse's name might be on the title (with an "or" not an "and"), otherwise you're in for lot of paperwork. I'd still call the DMV and see what they say.
 


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