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#1
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help with boat that was sold illegally
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#3
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help with boat that was sold illegally
On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 17:00:59 -0400, Keith Nuttle
wrote: Wayne.B wrote: On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 16:05:17 -0400, wrote: I'm in GA and bought a boat from someone who got it from someone else. It came from and is currently still registered in FL, where the someone else supposedly got it from "his brother". The person I got it from gave me a notorized bill of sale, but the someone else he got it from didn't give him anything, never has had the title and never has registered the boat. How do you know it is titled in Florida? Do you know who is named on the title and/or registration, and can you contact them? If you can't resolve it that way and want your money back, I'd sue the seller in small claims court and let law enforcement handle the other details. If you have a Florida Registration number on the side of the boat, contact Florida find the last legitimate person to register the boat with that number. That's what the GA DNR suggested, but the FL DMV won't tell me anything about it. I asked them if they could at least tell me whether it was stolen or not and they wouldn't even say that. Working both ends, from the last legitimate owner and the person you purchased the boat from, you should be able to get something accomplished. The person you dealt with in the purchase could be guilty of dealing with stolen merchandise. I'd hate to see him get in any trouble since he tried to do it right, but since he provided me with a notorized bill of sale that might help him if things eventually get ugly. |
#4
posted to rec.boats,rec.boats.building,rec.boats.cruising
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help with boat that was sold illegally
wrote I'd hate to see him get in any trouble since he tried to do it right, but since he provided me with a notorized bill of sale that might help him if things eventually get ugly. Sounds ugly already to me. |
#5
posted to rec.boats,rec.boats.building,rec.boats.cruising
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help with boat that was sold illegally
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#6
posted to rec.boats,rec.boats.building,rec.boats.cruising
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help with boat that was sold illegally
wrote in message ... On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 17:00:59 -0400, Keith Nuttle wrote: Wayne.B wrote: On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 16:05:17 -0400, wrote: I'm in GA and bought a boat from someone who got it from someone else. It came from and is currently still registered in FL, where the someone else supposedly got it from "his brother". The person I got it from gave me a notorized bill of sale, but the someone else he got it from didn't give him anything, never has had the title and never has registered the boat. How do you know it is titled in Florida? Do you know who is named on the title and/or registration, and can you contact them? If you can't resolve it that way and want your money back, I'd sue the seller in small claims court and let law enforcement handle the other details. If you have a Florida Registration number on the side of the boat, contact Florida find the last legitimate person to register the boat with that number. That's what the GA DNR suggested, but the FL DMV won't tell me anything about it. I asked them if they could at least tell me whether it was stolen or not and they wouldn't even say that. Working both ends, from the last legitimate owner and the person you purchased the boat from, you should be able to get something accomplished. The person you dealt with in the purchase could be guilty of dealing with stolen merchandise. I'd hate to see him get in any trouble since he tried to do it right, but since he provided me with a notorized bill of sale that might help him if things eventually get ugly. Sounds like the first bunch of fruitcakes didn't own the boat they sold which would make it hot. The guy that sold it to you didn't do it right. Just because he signed a bill of sale doesn't make him or the transaction legit. H didn't legally own the boat since he didn't have a FL title and guess what? Neither do you. Paying for stolen goods does not make them yours. It makes you a criminal. You should be looking out for your own ass, not his. |
#7
posted to rec.boats,rec.boats.building,rec.boats.cruising
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help with boat that was sold illegally
On Oct 29, 6:31*am, "mmc" wrote:
wrote in message ... On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 17:00:59 -0400, Keith Nuttle wrote: Wayne.B wrote: On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 16:05:17 -0400, wrote: I'm in GA and bought a boat from someone who got it from someone else. It came from and is currently still registered in FL, where the someone else supposedly got it from "his brother". The person I got it from gave me a notorized bill of sale, but the someone else he got it from didn't give him anything, never has had the title and never has registered the boat. How do you know it is titled in Florida? * Do you know who is named on the title and/or registration, and can you contact them? If you can't resolve it that way and want your money back, I'd sue the seller in small claims court and let law enforcement handle the other details. If you have a Florida Registration number on the side of the boat, contact Florida find the last legitimate person to register the boat with that number. That's what the GA DNR suggested, but the FL DMV won't tell me anything about it. I asked them if they could at least tell me whether it was stolen or not and they wouldn't even say that. Working both ends, from the last legitimate owner and the person you purchased the boat from, you should be able to get something accomplished. This is stupid. If you have the name of the registered (in FL) owner and can contact them all you have to do is get them to apply for a replacement of a lost title, then have them sign it over to you. I doubt that there is any hanky panky going on at all. People are just lazy when they sell boats and dont always go through the correct procedure. I bought a boat in FL and brought it back to TX then transferred the title. We had some problems with paperwork lacking, but we worked it out in FL. The interesting thing was that Texas, my home state, screwed themselves out of a huge hunk of money. I wanted to buy the boat then get a Texas title on it and then sail it back to Texas. Texas was adamant that they had to have the boat in Texas before they could register it. They didn't explain how I was to get it from FL to TX without registration. If they had been willing to work with me they would have gotten the $2,500 in sales tax from the sale. They were not. So I registered it in FL, paid FL the sales tax, and sailed it home and transferred the title to Texas for a piddling fee. Texas could have had the $2500 sales tax if they had been more flexible. The person you dealt with in the purchase could be guilty of dealing with stolen merchandise. I'd hate to see him get in any trouble since he tried to do it right, but since he provided me with a notorized bill of sale that might help him if things eventually get ugly. Sounds like the first bunch of fruitcakes didn't own the boat they sold which would make it hot. The guy that sold it to you didn't do it right. Just because he signed a bill of sale doesn't make him or the transaction legit. H didn't legally own the boat since he didn't have a FL title and guess what? Neither do you. Paying for stolen goods does not make them yours. It makes you a criminal.. You should be looking out for your own ass, not his. |
#8
posted to rec.boats,rec.boats.building,rec.boats.cruising
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help with boat that was sold illegally
"mmc" wrote in message g.com... wrote in message ... On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 17:00:59 -0400, Keith Nuttle wrote: Wayne.B wrote: On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 16:05:17 -0400, wrote: I'm in GA and bought a boat from someone who got it from someone else. It came from and is currently still registered in FL, where the someone else supposedly got it from "his brother". The person I got it from gave me a notorized bill of sale, but the someone else he got it from didn't give him anything, never has had the title and never has registered the boat. How do you know it is titled in Florida? Do you know who is named on the title and/or registration, and can you contact them? If you can't resolve it that way and want your money back, I'd sue the seller in small claims court and let law enforcement handle the other details. If you have a Florida Registration number on the side of the boat, contact Florida find the last legitimate person to register the boat with that number. That's what the GA DNR suggested, but the FL DMV won't tell me anything about it. I asked them if they could at least tell me whether it was stolen or not and they wouldn't even say that. Working both ends, from the last legitimate owner and the person you purchased the boat from, you should be able to get something accomplished. The person you dealt with in the purchase could be guilty of dealing with stolen merchandise. I'd hate to see him get in any trouble since he tried to do it right, but since he provided me with a notorized bill of sale that might help him if things eventually get ugly. Sounds like the first bunch of fruitcakes didn't own the boat they sold which would make it hot. The guy that sold it to you didn't do it right. Just because he signed a bill of sale doesn't make him or the transaction legit. H didn't legally own the boat since he didn't have a FL title and guess what? Neither do you. Paying for stolen goods does not make them yours. It makes you a criminal. You should be looking out for your own ass, not his. At last, a reasonable man. Now's the time to either get clear paper to it, get clear of it, or have an officer turn up at your door with papers and handcuffs wanting the boat and taking custody of the OP for possession and interstate transportation of a stolen chattel (Dyer Act, a federal crime), or pay the man when one of the crazies involved in the plot comes back and sez they want their boat back and he's out the dough and the boat and may be fined. Steve |
#9
posted to rec.boats,rec.boats.building,rec.boats.cruising
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help with boat that was sold illegally
"SteveB" wrote in message ... "mmc" wrote in message g.com... wrote in message ... On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 17:00:59 -0400, Keith Nuttle wrote: Wayne.B wrote: On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 16:05:17 -0400, wrote: I'm in GA and bought a boat from someone who got it from someone else. It came from and is currently still registered in FL, where the someone else supposedly got it from "his brother". The person I got it from gave me a notorized bill of sale, but the someone else he got it from didn't give him anything, never has had the title and never has registered the boat. How do you know it is titled in Florida? Do you know who is named on the title and/or registration, and can you contact them? If you can't resolve it that way and want your money back, I'd sue the seller in small claims court and let law enforcement handle the other details. If you have a Florida Registration number on the side of the boat, contact Florida find the last legitimate person to register the boat with that number. That's what the GA DNR suggested, but the FL DMV won't tell me anything about it. I asked them if they could at least tell me whether it was stolen or not and they wouldn't even say that. Working both ends, from the last legitimate owner and the person you purchased the boat from, you should be able to get something accomplished. The person you dealt with in the purchase could be guilty of dealing with stolen merchandise. I'd hate to see him get in any trouble since he tried to do it right, but since he provided me with a notorized bill of sale that might help him if things eventually get ugly. Sounds like the first bunch of fruitcakes didn't own the boat they sold which would make it hot. The guy that sold it to you didn't do it right. Just because he signed a bill of sale doesn't make him or the transaction legit. H didn't legally own the boat since he didn't have a FL title and guess what? Neither do you. Paying for stolen goods does not make them yours. It makes you a criminal. You should be looking out for your own ass, not his. At last, a reasonable man. Now's the time to either get clear paper to it, get clear of it, or have an officer turn up at your door with papers and handcuffs wanting the boat and taking custody of the OP for possession and interstate transportation of a stolen chattel (Dyer Act, a federal crime), or pay the man when one of the crazies involved in the plot comes back and sez they want their boat back and he's out the dough and the boat and may be fined. Steve I agree Steve. Seems like there's always a hiccup or 3 with deals that seem too good to be true. |
#10
posted to rec.boats,rec.boats.building,rec.boats.cruising
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help with boat that was sold illegally
"mmc" wrote in message g.com... "SteveB" wrote in message ... "mmc" wrote in message g.com... wrote in message ... On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 17:00:59 -0400, Keith Nuttle wrote: Wayne.B wrote: On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 16:05:17 -0400, wrote: I'm in GA and bought a boat from someone who got it from someone else. It came from and is currently still registered in FL, where the someone else supposedly got it from "his brother". The person I got it from gave me a notorized bill of sale, but the someone else he got it from didn't give him anything, never has had the title and never has registered the boat. How do you know it is titled in Florida? Do you know who is named on the title and/or registration, and can you contact them? If you can't resolve it that way and want your money back, I'd sue the seller in small claims court and let law enforcement handle the other details. If you have a Florida Registration number on the side of the boat, contact Florida find the last legitimate person to register the boat with that number. That's what the GA DNR suggested, but the FL DMV won't tell me anything about it. I asked them if they could at least tell me whether it was stolen or not and they wouldn't even say that. Working both ends, from the last legitimate owner and the person you purchased the boat from, you should be able to get something accomplished. The person you dealt with in the purchase could be guilty of dealing with stolen merchandise. I'd hate to see him get in any trouble since he tried to do it right, but since he provided me with a notorized bill of sale that might help him if things eventually get ugly. Sounds like the first bunch of fruitcakes didn't own the boat they sold which would make it hot. The guy that sold it to you didn't do it right. Just because he signed a bill of sale doesn't make him or the transaction legit. H didn't legally own the boat since he didn't have a FL title and guess what? Neither do you. Paying for stolen goods does not make them yours. It makes you a criminal. You should be looking out for your own ass, not his. At last, a reasonable man. Now's the time to either get clear paper to it, get clear of it, or have an officer turn up at your door with papers and handcuffs wanting the boat and taking custody of the OP for possession and interstate transportation of a stolen chattel (Dyer Act, a federal crime), or pay the man when one of the crazies involved in the plot comes back and sez they want their boat back and he's out the dough and the boat and may be fined. Steve I agree Steve. Seems like there's always a hiccup or 3 with deals that seem too good to be true. I thought so, too, when I recently bought a Lund. The husband was out of town working. I had the wife show up at DMV with a notarized bill of sale, which she did, and it flew right through. Nothing like having the primary parties together, and if they don't want to do that, it's just thank you very much and a quick hang-up of the phone. Steve |
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