Once there is a title, names are attached. Because the title has never been created yet. They may own it, sell it to the next person at a profit. None of the people that handled that bike ever puts there name on it. The manufacturer, the shipper, the warehouse, the importer, another shipper, another warehouse, another shipper, a storage room. Just hands that the product was delivered through. This is the paperwork before any name gets attached to the vehicle. Has nothing to do with proper paperwork for ownership. Now plating an off-road bike, that is a state to state deal. Take that down and you can get a title and tags for that trailer. Some of the paperwork you get with it is an MSO. Go down to Harbor Freight and buy one of there utility trailers. You just wasted a trip because you didn't know of MSOs. Loose a title, just go down to the DMV and have a new one printed off. Loose the MSO before it is a title, you are screwed. The MSO is just paperwork before being turned into a title. A title puts the bike and you in "the system". The MSO is the paperwork printed up by the manufacturer that is used to get a title. The original title for a bike comes from somewhere. It is the paperwork that states that said vehicle is a vehicle made by the manufacturer. The certificate of orgin, sometimes called MSO (Manufacturre Statement of Orgin) is good. Your seller may also be avoiding sales taxes on a MC he didn't need a tag to ride offroad? legal sale and no tag needed in my state so i was unwilling to pay the trailer mfg $25 to mail me a cert of origin I didn't need. I sodl an equipment railer last week with no title or cert of origin. Were you actually being a smart buyer you would have been asking very specific questions on what the "title said"-in detail! I'm not pointing fingers but the onus is on you, the buyer. My county clerk is always helpful toward a solution of simplicity if it's legal.Įvery state is a different set of laws and it's your states laws you need to know to become a knowledgeable buyer who doesn'tt waste time & money. What can be done sometimes depends on if the clerk is open to solutions or fixated on being a bureaucrat type. I had to get him a title for his state to allow him to put it in his name and get it tagged.ĭon't blame the seller for your issue-if it is an issue? You need to ask your state-meaning the local clerk, what will work? it might be that you could buy it on a bill of sale then claim a lost title and tag it if they'd allow that. In my state it didn't require a tag so I sold it on a certificate of origin to a guy in NY. I owned a travel trailer that we bought brand new-ordered it in fact.
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