I live in Nevada. I recently sold my car and the out-of-state dealer (New Hampshire) I bought it from forged my name three times (and had the signatures fraudulently notarized!!) on some paperwork in order to get me a title that needed to be corrected before the local Nevada DMV could issue it to me after the loan was paid off by the new buyer. There were mistakes on the original title (the car was financed so I never saw the first title) that was issued two years ago and it was the dealer's responsibility to correct them. They never did and I was completely unaware of it. It did not become an issue until I sold the car a couple months ago. They stupidly emailed me all the documents to prove that they were working on the problem. I saw all the forgeries, hence I am now informed of their felonies.
They sent these docs to the local DMV and apparently they have accepted them and the title is now on it's way to me. If I sign this title for the new buyer that I sold the car to, how does that implicate me in this "Intent to fraud" in case the title is audited in the future by either Nevada (my state) or California (the state of the buyer)? Is there any other way the buyer of my car could a get clean title to his car without me signing the one that is based on fraudulent documents?
I wrote the owner of the dealership and he never responded.
They sent these docs to the local DMV and apparently they have accepted them and the title is now on it's way to me. If I sign this title for the new buyer that I sold the car to, how does that implicate me in this "Intent to fraud" in case the title is audited in the future by either Nevada (my state) or California (the state of the buyer)? Is there any other way the buyer of my car could a get clean title to his car without me signing the one that is based on fraudulent documents?
I wrote the owner of the dealership and he never responded.