When Maria found out her husband took the family car without her permission during their separation, she panicked. The car was in her name and bought before they got married. But he said it belonged to both of them since they used joint funds for repairs.
If you are in a similar situation in Texas, this article offers legal guidance and resources about Texas divorce and vehicle laws.
Like many Texans facing divorce, Maria needed quick answers about her rights to her car. At Warren & Migliaccio, L.L.P., we understand how stressful vehicle disputes can be during divorce proceedings.
Your car is more than just transportation. It is important for work, taking care of kids, and daily life. The question “can your spouse take your vehicle in Texas” does not have a simple answer. But we will explain how you can protect your rights.
Texas has special community property laws that affect vehicle ownership during divorce. Whether your spouse can claim your vehicle depends on:
- When you bought it
- How you paid for it
- What documents you have
Let’s review how Texas law treats vehicle ownership in divorce and how you can protect yourself.
Understanding Texas Community Property Laws
Texas is a community property state, which means the law presumes most property acquired during marriage belongs equally to both spouses. Assets acquired during the marriage are generally presumed to be community property unless proven otherwise. This is true even if only your name is on the car title or you’re the one making car payments.
Under Texas Family Code § 3.002, all property acquired during marriage is considered community property unless you can prove otherwise. Even if just one spouse’s name is on the vehicle title, if it was bought during the marriage with marital funds, it’s likely considered community property.
But not every vehicle falls under these rules. Separate property can include:
- Cars owned before marriage, which are considered separate property under Texas law
- Vehicles received as gifts from someone outside the marriage, which are also considered separate property
- Cars inherited individually during marriage, and these are considered separate property as well
- Vehicles bought entirely with separate funds
The tricky part is proving a car is your separate property. Texas courts want “clear and convincing evidence”—which is a pretty high bar. If you used marital funds for payments or repairs, even a car you owned before marriage could end up in the property division pile.
When Your Spouse Can Claim Rights to Your Vehicle
Your spouse can’t just take your vehicle without legal grounds, but certain situations might give them a legitimate claim. In legal disputes over vehicle ownership, both spouses are considered parties, and the court will address claims and rights between these parties. Knowing these scenarios helps you prepare for possible disputes.
Vehicles Purchased During Marriage
If you bought a car while married, Texas usually sees it as community property, no matter whose name is on the title. This holds true even if:
- Only one spouse signed the purchase contract
- The title lists just one spouse
- One spouse made all the payments from their own account
What matters most is where the money came from. If you used income earned during marriage, that car becomes part of the community estate and is up for grabs in divorce proceedings.
Determining the value of the car is an important step in dividing assets during divorce, ensuring a fair distribution between both parties.
Pre-Marriage Vehicles with Marital Payments
A car you owned before marriage is usually your separate property. If the vehicle was purchased prior to the marriage, it is generally considered separate property unless marital funds were used for significant payments. But if marital funds paid for big expenses, things get complicated:
- Car loan payments: If your spouse helped pay off a pre-marriage car loan with marital funds, they might get a partial interest in the car.
- Major repairs: Significant repairs or improvements paid with community property can lead to shared ownership claims.
- Insurance and maintenance: Routine stuff doesn’t usually matter, but big investments might.
Your spouse’s contributions don’t automatically make the whole car community property, but they might deserve reimbursement for payments made with marital assets.
Court Orders During Divorce
Once divorce proceedings start, temporary court orders often spell out who uses which vehicle. These orders override normal ownership rules and ignoring them can have legal consequences. A court order may specify each party’s rights and responsibilities regarding vehicle use during the divorce.
- Employment transportation needs
- Child custody and transportation requirements
- Safety concerns or domestic violence issues
- Each party’s finances and options for other transportation
Break a court order about vehicle use, and you could face contempt charges, fines, or worse.
Protecting Your Vehicle as Separate Property
Want to prove a vehicle is your separate property? Having your name on the title isn’t enough. Texas courts want solid evidence to get past the community property presumption. Be sure to gather all relevant documents, such as the vehicle title and any supporting paperwork, to strengthen your claim.
Essential Documentation
Gather and save these key documents:
- Original purchase receipts showing where the money came from
- Bank statements proving separate funds paid for the car
- Gift letters if the car was a present from family
- Inheritance documentation for cars received through an estate
- Loan documents showing who’s responsible
- Title history showing continuous separate ownership
- Appraisal or valuation report to document the car’s current value for legal purposes
Keep a certified copy of everything somewhere safe, where your spouse can’t get to it. If you’re nervous about security, maybe leave copies with your texas divorce attorney or in a safety deposit box.
Maintaining Separate Property Status
To keep your vehicle classified as separate property, careful documentation and financial separation are key to maintaining the vehicle as a spouse’s separate property during divorce:
- Pay all expenses from separate funds: Use your own accounts or separate money for loans, insurance, repairs, and maintenance.
- Avoid co-mingling funds: Don’t use marital assets for car expenses if you want to keep the car separate.
- Document everything: Save records of all payments and where the money came from.
- Update beneficiaries: Make sure your insurance and loan docs are current.
Even small uses of marital funds can muddy the waters. If you have to use community property for car expenses, document why and maybe even get a written agreement about reimbursement.
Gift and Inheritance Considerations
Cars you get as gifts or inheritances during marriage are usually separate property, but you’ll need proof. If a spouse received a vehicle as a gift, proper documentation is needed to prove its separate property status:
- Gift documentation: Cards, letters, or formal statements from the giver
- Witness testimony: Friends or family who saw the gift happen
- Inheritance records: Probate docs, wills, or estate records showing the transfer
- Value documentation: Appraisals showing the car’s worth when you got it
What Happens During Divorce Proceedings
The divorce process has set ways to resolve vehicle disputes. The division of vehicles and other property is a key issue in any divorce case in Texas. Understanding the timeline and steps can help you protect yourself right from the start.
Temporary Orders and Emergency Relief
Before a final divorce decree, Texas courts can issue temporary court orders during divorce proceedings to handle immediate needs. Vehicles are often subject to these temporary court orders during divorce proceedings. If your spouse threatens to take your car or already has, you can ask for:
- Temporary restraining orders (TROs): Stop your spouse from taking, selling, or damaging vehicles
- Emergency hearings: Get court help fast when something urgent happens
- Exclusive use orders: Give you sole access to certain vehicles during divorce proceedings
It’s often a good idea to file for temporary relief early so car-related conflicts don’t spiral out of control.
Property Division Standards
Texas courts divide community property using a “just and right” standard, looking at things like:
- Each spouse’s earning ability and financial needs
- Who was at fault for the marriage ending
- Benefits the innocent spouse would have gotten if the marriage continued
- Who’s caring for the kids
- Each person’s health and age
This approach is known as equitable distribution, meaning the court aims for a fair division of marital property, which may not always be an equal split.
This doesn’t mean every marital asset gets split 50/50. A judge might give a more valuable car to the spouse with greater transportation needs or a higher earning potential.
Vehicle Loans and Debt Responsibilities
Dividing cars gets trickier when loans are involved. Some things to keep in mind:
- Joint liability: Both spouses are on the hook to lenders until loans are paid off or refinanced, even if the divorce decree says otherwise. The spouse who keeps the car may also be held responsible for the remaining loan balance.
- Refinancing requirements: The spouse keeping the car usually has to refinance the loan in their name or pay it off. When assigning responsibility, the court will consider each spouse’s ability to continue paying the car loan.
- Credit implications: If joint auto loans aren’t handled right, both credit scores can take a hit.
- Timeline restrictions: Divorce decrees often set deadlines for refinancing or selling cars with outstanding loans.
The court can’t force a lender to take a spouse’s name off a car loan—only the lender can do that, and only if the other spouse qualifies.
Legal Remedies When Your Spouse Takes Your Vehicle
If your spouse takes your car without legal authority or against court orders, you’ve got options. Taking a vehicle without proper legal authority can create significant legal issues for both spouses. Acting quickly is key to protecting your rights and getting your property back.
Immediate Legal Actions
File for Contempt of Court: If your spouse breaks a temporary vehicle order, file a motion for contempt. Either party can file a motion with the court if the other party violates a vehicle-related order. Courts can impose fines, jail time, or other penalties to enforce compliance.
Request Emergency Hearings: If you need the car for work, child care, or safety, courts can schedule emergency hearings fast. Bring evidence of your urgent need and your spouse’s unauthorized actions.
Document Everything: Make a detailed record, including:
- When and how your spouse took the car
- Any threats or statements they made
- Photos or videos of the car being taken
- Witness statements from neighbors or family
- Police reports if law enforcement got involved
Criminal and Civil Implications
Taking a car without permission can trigger serious legal trouble beyond family court:
- Theft charges: If your spouse takes a car that’s clearly your separate property, they could face criminal charges. While vehicles are often subject to court orders, personal belongings such as clothing or small household items are usually not included in the divorce decree unless they have significant value.
- Unauthorized use: Even taking a community property car against court orders can lead to criminal penalties.
- Insurance issues: Unauthorized use can void insurance, leaving you both exposed to liability claims.
- Damage responsibility: Your spouse is on the hook for any damage while they have the car without authorization.
Working with Law Enforcement
Police often see car disputes between spouses as civil matters, but sometimes criminal charges are possible:
- You’ve got clear separate property documentation showing the car is yours alone
- There are court orders barring your spouse from taking the car
- There’s evidence of threats, violence, or other criminal behavior
- Your spouse has hidden the car or won’t return it despite legal demands
When asking for police help, bring copies of court orders, title documents, and any other proof you have. Law enforcement may also require proof that there is no outstanding debt on the vehicle before assisting with a title transfer.
Special Circumstances and Judicial Discretion
Texas courts know vehicle disputes aren’t always simple property division issues. Judges have broad discretion and can consider special circumstances that affect each spouse’s transportation needs. The court will also consider each spouse’s financial situation when deciding how to allocate vehicles.
Safety and Domestic Violence Considerations
If domestic violence is part of the picture, vehicle access becomes a safety concern. Courts may:
- Give exclusive use of a vehicle to the victim spouse, no matter who owns it
- Award a vehicle to one party to ensure their safety and mobility
- Order the abusive spouse to stay away from family vehicles
- Require supervised exchanges if both spouses need access
- Issue protective orders that include vehicle restrictions
Document any history of violence, threats, or controlling behavior about car access. This kind of evidence can have a big impact on court decisions about who gets which vehicle, both temporarily and in the long run.
Employment and Child Care Needs
Judges also weigh practical transportation needs when deciding vehicle issues:
- Work schedules: People with long commutes or odd hours might get priority for reliable cars. The court will assess which person has the greater need for reliable transportation based on their employment situation.
- Child custody arrangements: The main caregiver often gets the family car, especially if he needs it for transporting kids.
- Special/Specific needs: Vehicles modified for disabilities or medical conditions usually stay with the spouse who needs them.
- Geographic factors: Living in rural areas with little public transportation can tip the scales in vehicle allocation.
Financial Capacity and Vehicle Maintenance
The court looks at each spouse’s ability to maintain and insure vehicles. They’ll consider income, employment stability, and whether someone actually understands what it takes to keep a car running.
- Income levels and employment stability
- Understanding of vehicle maintenance requirements
- Ability to afford insurance, repairs, and ongoing expenses
- Credit status for potential refinancing needs
Sometimes, these practical factors matter more than just whose name is on the title—if one spouse really can’t afford to keep a car, that can tip the scales. Additionally, the court may award other assets to the spouse not receiving the vehicle in order to balance out the division if one spouse keeps a more valuable vehicle.
Steps to Protect Your Vehicle Rights
It’s a good idea to take legal action early, whether you’re in the thick of divorce proceedings or just sensing trouble ahead. To protect your interests, it is crucial to prepare yourself for divorce negotiations regarding vehicle ownership and division. Getting organized now can save you a lot of headaches and money later.
Immediate Protection Measures
Secure Important Documents: Gather every bit of vehicle paperwork you can—titles, registration, insurance, loan info, maintenance records—for all motor vehicles you own or use. Keep copies in more than one safe spot.
Document Your Vehicle’s History: Start a record that shows:
- Purchase date, price, and where the money came from
- Loan payments and whether they were made with marital funds or separate funds
- Major repairs or upgrades and who paid for them
- Current fair market value (legal professionals appraisal helps)
Photograph Everything: Take clear photos—inside, outside, the odometer, any damage, or special features. You never know what detail will matter.
Legal Preparations
Consult a Texas Divorce Attorney: Talking to a divorce lawyer early can make all the difference. We offer free consultations to help you get your bearings and come up with a plan.
File for Divorce if Necessary: Sometimes, you need to get the divorce process started and ask for temporary court orders to stop your spouse from taking or selling the car. After divorce, transferring a vehicle title is handled at the local county tax office, where you will need to provide proper documentation.
Consider Restraining Orders: If you think your spouse might sell, damage, or hide a vehicle, a temporary restraining order can protect your interests fast.
Financial Protections
Separate Your Finances: Open your own bank accounts and start directing your pay there. This keeps marital funds from being used for car expenses without your say.
Maintain Insurance: Don’t let your car insurance lapse. If your spouse uses the family car without permission, you’ll want coverage—and your insurer needs to know what’s going on.
Monitor Credit Reports: Keep an eye out for new auto loans or credit pulls that could impact your joint accounts or your credit score. Watch for any new loans or credit activity in your ex spouse’s name that could affect your joint accounts.
Vehicle Loans and Financial Obligations
Outstanding car loans add another layer of stress to property division. When dividing marital assets during divorce, outstanding car loans are a key factor that must be considered. Both family court orders and lender rules come into play here.
Joint Liability Issues
If you and your spouse both signed for the car loan, you’re both on the hook until it’s paid off or refinanced. However, if the loan or title is in only one spouse’s name, that spouse may bear primary responsibility for the debt. Here’s what can go wrong:
- Continued liability: Even if the divorce decree says your ex gets the car and the loan, the lender can still come after you if payments are missed.
- Credit damage: Missed payments by your ex will hit your credit report too.
- Collection actions: Lenders don’t care about your divorce settlement—they’ll pursue either of you for unpaid debt.
Basically, you’re not off the hook until the loan is paid off or refinanced in just one name.
Refinancing Requirements
Most divorce settlements say the spouse keeping the car must refinance the loan—usually within 30 to 90 days. But it’s not always straightforward:
- Credit qualification: The spouse keeping the car has to qualify for the loan alone.
- Interest rate changes: The new loan might have a higher (or lower) interest rate.
- Loan terms: Refinancing could mean a longer or shorter payoff period.
- Vehicle value: If the car’s worth less than what’s owed, refinancing gets tricky.
After refinancing, a properly assigned title is required to complete the transfer of vehicle ownership to the spouse keeping the car.
Consequences of Failed Refinancing
If refinancing doesn’t work out, things get messy:
- Court intervention: The judge might order the motor vehicle sold and split the proceeds.
- Alternative arrangements: The court could adjust the property division to balance things out.
- Continued joint liability: Both of you stay exposed to credit risks.
- Contempt proceedings: Not following court orders about refinancing can land you in legal trouble.
Community Estate vs. Separate Property: Practical Examples
It helps to look at real-world situations to understand how Texas community property laws work with vehicles.
Case Study: Proving Separate Property in a Divorce
A key part of Texas divorce law is the strong rule that all property acquired during the marriage is community property.
The case of In re Marriage of Morris, 12 S.W.3d 877 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2000, no pet.), shows how hard it is to prove otherwise.
In this case, a husband said that a piece of land bought during the marriage was his separate property because his father bought it for him. But since the land was deeded to the husband during the marriage, the court assumed it was community property.
This case is important because it shows that just saying an asset was a gift is not enough. A spouse must provide clear and convincing evidence to prove the asset is separate property. This is needed to overcome the community property presumption.
Example 1: Pre-Marriage Vehicle with Mixed Payments
Jennifer, the spouse owned a car worth $15,000 before marrying Tom, but she still owed $8,000 on it. During their marriage, marital funds paid off that $8,000 loan balance.
Analysis: Jennifer’s car is still her separate asset, but Tom can claim a share of the $8,000 paid with marital funds. So, Jennifer might keep the car but owe Tom $4,000, or give up other marital assets worth that much.
Example 2: Gift Vehicle During Marriage
Carlos got a new car as a graduation gift from his parents while married to Lisa. There’s a written gift letter saying it was for Carlos alone.
Analysis: That car is Carlos’s separate property. Lisa doesn’t have a claim—unless marital funds were used for big repairs or upgrades. The gift letter is key evidence here.
Example 3: Vehicle Purchased During Marriage
Sarah and Mike bought a family car for $25,000 during their marriage. Only Sarah’s name is on the title, but the money came from their joint account.
Analysis: Even though Sarah’s name is on the title, the car’s considered community property because marital funds bought it. Both have equal rights, and the divorce court will divide it as part of the property settlement. In this situation, the two spouses have equal rights to the vehicle as community property.
Frequently Asked Questions Regarding Can Your Spouse Take Your Vehicle in Texas Legally?
Can my spouse take my car if it’s in my name in Texas?
Your spouse generally cannot take your vehicle without permission if it’s your separate property. However, if the car was purchased during marriage with marital funds, it’s likely community property regardless of whose name is on the title, giving both spouses equal rights to the vehicle.
Key factors that determine vehicle rights:
When the car was purchased (before or during marriage)
Source of funds used for purchase and payments
Any existing court orders or temporary restraining orders
Whether the vehicle is classified as separate or community property
Is a car community property in Texas?
A vehicle is considered community property in Texas if it was purchased during the marriage using marital funds, regardless of whose name appears on the car title. This presumption applies even if only one spouse signed the purchase documents or made the payments.
Vehicles that remain separate property include:
Cars owned before marriage
Vehicles received as gifts or inheritance during marriage
Cars purchased entirely with separate property funds
Vehicles specified as separate in a prenuptial agreement
The burden of proving separate property requires “clear and convincing evidence” – a higher standard than typical civil cases.
Who gets the car in a Texas divorce?
Texas courts divide vehicles based on a “just and right” standard rather than an automatic 50/50 split. The spouse who receives the vehicle depends on multiple factors evaluated by the family court.
Courts consider:
Each spouse’s transportation needs for employment
Child custody arrangements and school transportation
Financial ability to maintain and insure the vehicle
Each party’s earning capacity and economic circumstances
Fault in the marriage breakdown (in fault-based divorces)
Safety concerns or domestic violence issues
The divorce court may award temporary use through court orders during proceedings, which supersede normal ownership rules.
Can a spouse sell a car without the other spouse’s permission in Texas?
A spouse cannot legally sell community property vehicles without the other spouse’s consent. For separate property vehicles, the owner spouse can sell without permission. However, selling marital assets during divorce proceedings without court approval or mutual agreement can result in serious legal consequences.
Potential consequences include:
Contempt of court charges if violating temporary orders
Financial penalties or reimbursement requirements
Negative impact on property division in the final decree
Criminal charges for unauthorized use in certain circumstances
How do I prove a car is separate property in Texas?
To establish a vehicle as separate property, you need comprehensive documentation showing the car belongs solely to you. The evidence must meet the “clear and convincing” standard required by Texas courts.
Essential documentation includes:
Original purchase receipts showing payment from separate funds
Bank statements proving separate property funds were used
Car title history demonstrating continuous separate ownership
Gift letters or inheritance documents if applicable
Loan documents showing individual responsibility
Pre-marriage ownership records with dates
Maintain these documents in a secure location and avoid using any marital funds for vehicle expenses if you want to preserve separate property status.
What happens to car loans in a Texas divorce?
Both spouses remain liable to the lender for joint auto loans until the debt is refinanced or paid off, regardless of what the divorce decree states. The court cannot force creditors to remove a spouse’s name from the loan.
Important considerations:
The spouse keeping the vehicle typically must refinance within 30-90 days
Failed refinancing can result in forced sale of the vehicle
Late payments by your ex-spouse still damage your credit
Courts may order alternative property division if refinancing fails
Contempt charges possible for non-compliance with refinancing orders
Can I report my spouse for stealing my car during separation in Texas?
You can file a police report if your spouse takes your separate property vehicle without permission. However, law enforcement often views disputes over community property as civil matters requiring court intervention rather than criminal theft.
Police will typically intervene when:
You have clear documentation proving separate property
Existing court orders prohibit your spouse from taking the vehicle
The taking involves threats, violence, or other criminal behavior
Your spouse refuses to return the vehicle after legal demand
For community property vehicles without court orders, seek immediate legal help to file for temporary restraining orders through the divorce court.
When is taking a spouse’s car considered theft in Texas?
Taking a spouse’s vehicle becomes criminal theft when the car is proven separate property and taken without consent. For community property vehicles, criminal charges are unlikely unless court orders specifically prohibit access.
The distinction depends on:
Property classification (separate vs. community)
Existence of temporary restraining orders or divorce decrees
Intent to permanently deprive the owner
Use of force, threats, or deception
Violation of existing court orders
Document any unauthorized taking immediately and consult with a family law attorney to determine whether civil or criminal remedies are appropriate.
How do I protect my vehicle during Texas divorce proceedings?
Protecting your vehicle requires immediate legal and practical steps. File for temporary orders early in the divorce process to establish exclusive use rights and prevent unauthorized taking or sale.
Protective measures include:
Secure all vehicle-related documents (title, registration, insurance)
Document the vehicle’s current condition with photos
File for temporary restraining orders if needed
Maintain separate property documentation
Continue insurance payments to avoid coverage gaps
Store the vehicle securely if safety is a concern
Monitor credit reports for new loans against the vehicle
Work with an experienced divorce attorney to ensure proper legal protection through court orders.
What if my spouse hides the car during divorce?
If your spouse conceals a vehicle during divorce proceedings, you have several legal remedies. Hiding marital assets violates Texas law and can result in severe consequences for the offending spouse.
Available legal actions:
File an emergency motion with the court
Request discovery to locate the vehicle
Seek contempt of court charges for violating orders
Obtain court orders for immediate return
Request unequal property division as punishment
Pursue criminal charges for unauthorized use if applicable
The court may award you a larger share of marital property or assess financial penalties against a spouse who hides assets during divorce.
Working with Warren & Migliaccio, L.L.P.
Vehicle disputes in divorce are stressful and need quick, smart legal moves. At our Texas law firm, we get that your car isn’t just a set of wheels—it’s your way to work, to get your kids, to keep some independence while your world’s in flux.
Our Texas divorce lawyers help clients with tough property division issues by:
- Analyzing vehicle ownership status under Texas community property laws
- Gathering and organizing essential documentation to support your claims
- Filing for emergency relief when you need the court to act fast
- Negotiating fair settlements that actually fit your real transportation needs
- Enforcing court orders when your ex ignores vehicle-related rules
We’ve handled hundreds of vehicle disputes—sometimes it’s just a title transfer, sometimes it’s a tangled mess with multiple cars, loans, and competing claims. No two cases are exactly the same.
Why Documentation Matters
In our experience, clients who keep good records almost always get better results. We’ll help you pull together:
- Purchase records and proof of where the money came from
- Loan payment histories showing which payments were marital funds and which were separate funds
- Insurance and maintenance receipts
- Professional appraisals to establish the value of the car
- Court filings and proof you followed any temporary orders
Protecting Your Future Transportation Needs
Think beyond the immediate legal fight—what about getting around after the divorce is done? Planning ahead for your car in a divorce can help ensure you have reliable transportation after the legal process is complete. Planning ahead can save you a world of frustration.
Vehicle Selection Strategy
If you’re splitting up more than one vehicle, be strategic. Ask yourself:
- Reliability and maintenance costs: Can you keep this car running without breaking the bank?
- Fuel efficiency: Will commuting cost you a fortune in gas?
- Insurance premiums: Some cars are way pricier to insure than others.
- Resale value: If you need to sell, will the car hold its value?
Credit and Financing Considerations
Divorce can shake up your finances. Here are a few things to keep in mind:
- Individual credit building: Start building credit in your own name.
- Income documentation: Keep records of your income for future loan applications.
- Down payment planning: Save up for a down payment, so you’re not relying on joint accounts later.
Transportation Alternatives
Sometimes you need a backup plan. While the divorce process drags on, you might need to get creative:
- Public transportation: Check out local bus or train options.
- Family support: Maybe a relative or friend can help with rides for a while.
- Rental vehicles: Short-term rentals can bridge the gap during court proceedings.
- Employer assistance: Some companies help with transportation or offer flexible work arrangements.
The question of whether your spouse can take your vehicle in Texas is a tricky one. Texas state laws usually say that vehicles bought during marriage are marital property, shared by both spouses.
Honestly, every car dispute in a divorce is a little different. The facts, paperwork, and even the date of separation can really affect what happens in family court or during a property settlement.
If you’re worried about losing access to your family vehicle or making mistakes with marital funds, talking to a divorce lawyer or family law attorney is smart. Legal advice can help you avoid headaches and protect your legal rights.
Are you dealing with a vehicle ownership fight in your Texas divorce or separation?
Reach out to Warren & Migliaccio, L.L.P. for a free consultation. Their family law professionals will look over your documents, walk you through your options, and help you protect your car and transportation during this stressful part of your divorce process. Call their law office at (888) 584-9614 or contact them online to schedule your free legal consultation.