Zero1Niner
Well-Known Member
Interesting article.
http://finance.yahoo.com/family-hom...hey-thats-my-jet-dont-deter-high-end-repo-men
http://finance.yahoo.com/family-hom...hey-thats-my-jet-dont-deter-high-end-repo-men
Interesting- in that "repossession" without a court order is otherwise known as "theft".
Good way to get arrested.
Interesting- in that "repossession" without a court order is otherwise known as "theft".
Good way to get arrested.
HISTORY OF FLIGHT
Grab the Airplane and Go
How to repossess an airliner without getting shot, or thrown in jail, or beat up, or slammed into a wall, or...
This month, National Air and Space Magazine has an article about repossessing airliners
Good mag.
My friends father was telling me a story one night of how a couple of years ago, he showed up at the airport with the FO, to find that his 767 had been repossessed.
He still had a company credit card so he and the FO ran to a ticket counter and bought tickets on some other Canadian airline and went home.
And that was it, the end of his flying career.
Interesting- in that "repossession" without a court order is otherwise known as "theft".
Good way to get arrested.
These are the owners repossessing their property...
Was that HIS 767 or somebody else he was hired to fly? If that was his own then I would love to be him.
These are the owners repossessing their property...
This month, National Air and Space Magazine has an article about repossessing airliners
Good mag.
My friends father was telling me a story one night of how a couple of years ago, he showed up at the airport with the FO, to find that his 767 had been repossessed.
He still had a company credit card so he and the FO ran to a ticket counter and bought tickets on some other Canadian airline and went home.
And that was it, the end of his flying career.
If the pilot gets ramped while doing the repo, and something is not in line, he gets the violation!
No, the lender is only the lien holder. The loan is secured by a lien on the aircraft. The lien is not enforcable unless the loan is in default. And the loan is not in default until a judge says it is.
As a practical matter, if the owner hasn't been making the payments, he isn't going to be very successful arguing in court that he's not in default and also isn't likely to be in a position to cure the default- although that's certainly a possibility. The lender still has to go to court though.
. In some situations, Barlow says, “pilots can pretty much name their price.”
Technically you are right, in order to "enforce" a repossession the lein holder needs a court order or "writ of replevin"(sp?). However, most repo's work off the "possession is 90% of the law", if a repo has taken place the defaulter must than prove they have a right to the property, if the lienholder can prove the default they are justified in the repo. IE in most juristictions if you catch the reposession before it goes down, without a court order the repo man has zero rights. They have to leave your property(not a factor most of the time in an aircraft repo) if you tell them to and they have no right to touch you, IE pull you out of the car/plane. That is why they sneak around at night or when they know you are occupied elsewhere.