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Arcadefreaque July 5th 05 06:27 PM

Dead people's boats and trailers
 
I think you'll find that you don't need a title for a boat that small.
The trailer would be another story. I've been told that the easiest
way to rectify the "no title" trailer is to register it as a homemade
trailer. But you would have to either do some significant work on the
trailer in order to justify the "homemade" classification, or you'd
have to live knowing that you lied about that :/ (probably best to
visit the registration department and find out for certain what your
options are)


Shortwave Sportfishing July 5th 05 06:49 PM

On Tue, 05 Jul 2005 16:06:38 GMT, Ignoramus26831
wrote:

I am in IL.

I bought a 12 foot boat with trailer at an "estate sale", for $120.

http://igor.chudov.com/projects/12-f...raft-Seafarer/

All we did was writing a "bill of sale" on a small piece of paper.

Now I am beginning to realize that I have to possibly go through a
mountain of paperwork to actually get title to the boat AND trailer.

Does anyone have any actual experience dealing with transfer of
boat/trailer titles etc?


Connecticut is a non-title state so any answer I give might be
suspect, but generally a bill of sale is sufficient proof of ownership
- in particular for $120.

If the boat had been previously registered, then you should be fine.
If the trailer has a VIN number on it, then just have the seller redo
the bill of sale referencing the VIN. If it doesn't have a VIN, then
just tell them that and show the bill of sale.

While I'm not a fan of most DMVs, usually if you approach them with
the attitude that you have a problem that only they can solve, it's
amazing how quickly it gets resolved.

Shortwave Sportfishing July 5th 05 07:11 PM

On Tue, 05 Jul 2005 18:02:59 GMT, Ignoramus26831
wrote:

On 5 Jul 2005 10:27:35 -0700, Arcadefreaque wrote:
I think you'll find that you don't need a title for a boat that small.
The trailer would be another story. I've been told that the easiest
way to rectify the "no title" trailer is to register it as a homemade
trailer. But you would have to either do some significant work on the
trailer in order to justify the "homemade" classification, or you'd
have to live knowing that you lied about that :/ (probably best to
visit the registration department and find out for certain what your
options are)


I have spent the good part of the morning trying to reach the DMV and
DNR on the phone, with no luck. I get either busy signals, or very
polite women who do not know anything and refer me to other, busy,
numbers.

It seems that I will need title and registration for the trailer, and
registration and possibly title for the boat itself. The boat should
not be a big problem.

The trailer will be more work. I was able to locate the seller of the
boat and she is willing to sign the necessary paperwork.

It looks like into this $120 boat, I will have to put $500 worth of
legal efforts and wasted time, PLUS FEES.


What the hell did you expect? It's a boat. :)

P. Fritz July 5th 05 07:54 PM


"Ignoramus26831" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 05 Jul 2005 18:11:06 GMT, Shortwave Sportfishing

wrote:
On Tue, 05 Jul 2005 18:02:59 GMT, Ignoramus26831
wrote:

On 5 Jul 2005 10:27:35 -0700, Arcadefreaque

wrote:
I think you'll find that you don't need a title for a boat that small.
The trailer would be another story. I've been told that the easiest
way to rectify the "no title" trailer is to register it as a homemade
trailer. But you would have to either do some significant work on the
trailer in order to justify the "homemade" classification, or you'd
have to live knowing that you lied about that :/ (probably best to
visit the registration department and find out for certain what your
options are)

I have spent the good part of the morning trying to reach the DMV and
DNR on the phone, with no luck. I get either busy signals, or very
polite women who do not know anything and refer me to other, busy,
numbers.

It seems that I will need title and registration for the trailer, and
registration and possibly title for the boat itself. The boat should
not be a big problem.

The trailer will be more work. I was able to locate the seller of the
boat and she is willing to sign the necessary paperwork.

It looks like into this $120 boat, I will have to put $500 worth of
legal efforts and wasted time, PLUS FEES.


What the hell did you expect? It's a boat. :)


If registartion of the trailer proves to be too painful or expensive,
I will probably just cut it in pieces with an angle grinder and throw
away. The boat is small enough that I can fit it into my truck's bed.

i
****ED OFF


Tell the DMV that it is a home built trailer





thunder July 5th 05 07:54 PM

On Tue, 05 Jul 2005 16:06:38 +0000, Ignoramus26831 wrote:

I am in IL.

I bought a 12 foot boat with trailer at an "estate sale", for $120.

http://igor.chudov.com/projects/12-f...raft-Seafarer/

All we did was writing a "bill of sale" on a small piece of paper.

Now I am beginning to realize that I have to possibly go through a
mountain of paperwork to actually get title to the boat AND trailer.

Does anyone have any actual experience dealing with transfer of
boat/trailer titles etc?

i


As you said it was an estate sale, this might help:

http://www.cyberdriveillinois.com/pu...s/vsd27518.pdf

Or:

http://www.cyberdriveillinois.com/de...tion/home.html


P. Fritz July 5th 05 08:23 PM


"Ignoramus26831" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 5 Jul 2005 14:54:27 -0400, P. Fritz

wrote:

"Ignoramus26831" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 05 Jul 2005 18:11:06 GMT, Shortwave Sportfishing

wrote:
On Tue, 05 Jul 2005 18:02:59 GMT, Ignoramus26831
wrote:

On 5 Jul 2005 10:27:35 -0700, Arcadefreaque

wrote:
I think you'll find that you don't need a title for a boat that

small.
The trailer would be another story. I've been told that the

easiest
way to rectify the "no title" trailer is to register it as a

homemade
trailer. But you would have to either do some significant work on

the
trailer in order to justify the "homemade" classification, or you'd
have to live knowing that you lied about that :/ (probably best to
visit the registration department and find out for certain what

your
options are)

I have spent the good part of the morning trying to reach the DMV and
DNR on the phone, with no luck. I get either busy signals, or very
polite women who do not know anything and refer me to other, busy,
numbers.

It seems that I will need title and registration for the trailer, and
registration and possibly title for the boat itself. The boat should
not be a big problem.

The trailer will be more work. I was able to locate the seller of the
boat and she is willing to sign the necessary paperwork.

It looks like into this $120 boat, I will have to put $500 worth of
legal efforts and wasted time, PLUS FEES.

What the hell did you expect? It's a boat. :)

If registartion of the trailer proves to be too painful or expensive,
I will probably just cut it in pieces with an angle grinder and throw
away. The boat is small enough that I can fit it into my truck's bed.

i
****ED OFF


Tell the DMV that it is a home built trailer


That's an interesting thought. I can surely remove the nameplate. What
would be the implications? Let's say that I am stopped by police for
some unrelated reason, would I get in trouble if they find out that
the registration is false?


How would they find out unless you told them?


i




Arcadefreaque July 5th 05 08:50 PM

I opted not to go this route myself, but just because it has
manufactured parts does not make "not homebuilt".

I do have a trailer that I bought from harborfreight as a kit. It is
licensed as a homebuilt trailer eventhough the manufacturer provides a
VIN plate and nice neat parts that are obviously prefabbed. I provided
the certificate that came with the trailer (that said "homemade
trailer" or something like that), and they went ahead and licensed it
as a home built trailer.

Also, I've licensed trailers as homebuilt when they were built from a
truck bed, or from parts of another trailer that had failed and
required siginificant (okay almost complete) rebuilding of everything
except the leafsprings.

As long as the #'s on your frame do not match up to a stolen or another
currently licensed trailer, they won't (and should not) question you.


P. Fritz July 5th 05 09:02 PM


"Arcadefreaque" wrote in message
oups.com...
I opted not to go this route myself, but just because it has
manufactured parts does not make "not homebuilt".

I do have a trailer that I bought from harborfreight as a kit. It is
licensed as a homebuilt trailer eventhough the manufacturer provides a
VIN plate and nice neat parts that are obviously prefabbed. I provided
the certificate that came with the trailer (that said "homemade
trailer" or something like that), and they went ahead and licensed it
as a home built trailer.

Also, I've licensed trailers as homebuilt when they were built from a
truck bed, or from parts of another trailer that had failed and
required siginificant (okay almost complete) rebuilding of everything
except the leafsprings.

As long as the #'s on your frame do not match up to a stolen or another
currently licensed trailer, they won't (and should not) question you.


I've built a couple of kit trailers over the years and had the same
experience....as well as helped a friend build one out of the remains of a
pick up.






*JimH* July 5th 05 10:27 PM

"Ignoramus26831" wrote in message
.. .
I am in IL.

I bought a 12 foot boat with trailer at an "estate sale", for $120.

http://igor.chudov.com/projects/12-f...raft-Seafarer/

All we did was writing a "bill of sale" on a small piece of paper.

Now I am beginning to realize that I have to possibly go through a
mountain of paperwork to actually get title to the boat AND trailer.

Does anyone have any actual experience dealing with transfer of
boat/trailer titles etc?

i


You may not need a title for this size of boat. The State registration
numbers on the boat along with the bill of sale may be all you need to get a
new registration for it.

BTW: Why do you keep changing the numbers in your handle?



Tim July 5th 05 11:33 PM

I have spent the good part of the morning trying to reach the DMV and
DNR on the phone, with no luck. I get either busy signals, or very
polite women who do not know anything and refer me to other, busy,
numbers. ....It looks like into this $120 boat, I will have to put $500
worth of
legal efforts and wasted time, PLUS FEES. ..."

Welcome to ILLINOIS!



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