If you borrowed money to buy your car, and you have fallen behind on your payments, the bank or finance company that loaned you the money may want to repossess your car. This pamphlet will tell you why and how they can do that, and what happens next. It will also tell you what you can do to keep a repo from happening.
Why can the bank take my car?
When you borrowed the money to buy the car, the bank asked you to sign an
A "Security Agreement" makes it legal for the bank to take your car if you fall behind on the payments.
agreement called a note. A note is a legally enforceable agreement which sets out what the bank expects of you, and what the bank will do for you. The note will tell you the amount of money the bank is going to loan you, what your payments are and how many of them you have to pay. It also contains a section called a security agreement. The security agreement says that you are giving the bank the right to repo your car if you fall
behind on your payments. The bank wants you to give it this right so it can be sure it will be paid back. If you fall behind, the bank can come and take your car and sell it
to get back the money it loaned you. The security agreement is why the bank can repo your car and not commit a crime. If there is no security agreement and the bank takes your car, they are committing an offense called conversion.
When can the bank take my car?
The bank can take your car only if you signed a valid security agreement and if you are in default.
Before the bank can repo your car, there must be a security agreement which you have signed. Also, you must be in default on your loan. Default means that you are too far behind in your payments. Normally, the note tells you when you will be in default. Some notes say you are in default if your payment is thirty days late, some say sooner, some later. New Hampshire state law says you cannot be in default unless your payment is ten or more days late. If the note says you are in default if your payment is less than ten days late, that part of the note is not enforceable.
The bank can take your car only if you signed a valid security agreement and if you are in default.
If you do default on your loan, most responsible banks and other lenders will tell you and ask you if you can get your payments caught up. If you cannot catch up, most responsible lenders will ask you to voluntarily give up the car. If you do not give the car up, the bank will try to take it from you.
How can the bank take my car?
The bank can take your car almost any way it wants to so long as it does not breach the peace. A breach of the peace happens whenever violent force is used or is provoked. For instance, if your car is locked in a garage and the repo company breaks into the garage to get the car, they have breached the peace. If you confront the repo company and tell them to leave your car alone, they must do so or they risk a breach of the peace. This is why cars are frequently repoed at night - if the owner is sleeping there will be little chance of a breach of the peace.
The repo company may not breach the peace when it takes your car
If you are there when the repo takes place, the repo company is supposed to let you remove your personal belongings from the car. This includes anything you have in the car, but usually does not include accessories you have installed in the car.
Also, the repo must take place without any assistance by the
police. If the repo company has a police officer with it during the repo, this is a violation of your Constitutional rights. However, the repo company or the bank should inform the police after the repo has taken place.
What happens after the repo?
When the bank sells your car, it must do so in a commercially reasonable manner
After the bank takes your car back, it will hold onto the car for a short while. If you have not been able to remove your personal belongings yet, the bank must allow you to do so immediately. Then the bank will sell the car in hopes of getting its money back. The bank may sell the car any way it wants so long as the sale is commercially reasonable. That means the bank must sell the car for a reasonable amount of money and in a reasonable manner. Most sales of repoed cars take place at an auction. As long as the auction is well attended and well advertised, auction sales are generally considered to be commercially reasonable. However, if the car is sold at a price which is dramatically lower than the retail value, that sale may not be commercially reasonable.
Calculating a Deficiency:
What you owe $5000.00
Bank's repo costs +500.00
Total debt $5500.00
Total debt $5500.00
less Sale price -3500.00
Deficiency $2000.00
Before the bank can sell the car, it should tell you where and when the sale will take place. This is so that if you want to attend and bid on your car, or if you just want to see how the sale goes, you can do so.
After the car is sold, the bank should write to you and tell you how much you owe on the car (the debt), how much the bank spent to sell the car (the bank s costs), and how much the car sold for (return). The bank has the right to add the costs to the debt. If the debt plus the costs is more than the car sold for, the difference is called a deficiency. For instance, if you owed $5000 on the car and it cost the bank $500 to repo and sell the car, the total debt is $5500. If at auction it sold for only $3500, the deficiency is $2000 ($5500 - $3500). The bank is legally allowed to charge you for the deficiency.
On the other hand, if the car sells for more than the debt plus the costs, that results in a surplus. The bank then owes you the surplus. For instance, if we use the same car above with the debt of $5000 and costs of $500, but it sells for $7000, then there is a surplus of $1500, which the bank owes you.
Calculating a Surplus:
What you owe $5000.00
Bank's repo costs +500.00
source:
http://216.239.41.104/search?q=cache:j5fvM...&hl=en&ie=UTF-8