DVLA do not answer questions
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In absence of documents to prove ownership, common sense is applied.
If you've been driving that car for a while, taxing it, insuring it and all your friends and family remember you buying it, then realistically it's yours. Unless it was stolen when you bought it, but that's another case entirely.
Can you prove right here, right now that you own your mobile phone? Or the shoes you're wearing today? It just works like that
If you've been driving that car for a while, taxing it, insuring it and all your friends and family remember you buying it, then realistically it's yours. Unless it was stolen when you bought it, but that's another case entirely.
Can you prove right here, right now that you own your mobile phone? Or the shoes you're wearing today? It just works like that
It's not as stupid a question as everyone on this thread has made out.
No one is ever likely to have any interest in who owns your shoes or a can of coke, but who actually owns a car can be a relevant factor when it comes to insurance cover and you often see the police asking "is it your car" on TV.
If there's no proof of ownership presumably two people can simply decide a car belongs to either one of them at any given moment (given free of charge, so no receipt) as happens to suit the situation.
No one is ever likely to have any interest in who owns your shoes or a can of coke, but who actually owns a car can be a relevant factor when it comes to insurance cover and you often see the police asking "is it your car" on TV.
If there's no proof of ownership presumably two people can simply decide a car belongs to either one of them at any given moment (given free of charge, so no receipt) as happens to suit the situation.
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