The Model A was purchased in 1930 by Lane Nelson's great-grandfather from Swanson Ford in Ceresco, Nebraska, and driven in turn by his son, Lane's grandfather. Then, when Lane's father turned 16, he was given the opportunity to restore the family Ford and make it his own—but an accident put it out of commission.
Lane recently took charge of efforts to get the car back on the road, with no bigger plans than Sunday drives and the occasional participation in a parade.
Did it work? Not so much. A Nebraska Department of Motor Vehicles official told Lane that once a vehicle has a "junk" title, it cannot thereafter be licensed and driven on public roads. The state claims that there are safety and consumer protection reasons. Lane argues that interested owners of old cars should be allowed to fix and drive whatever vehicle they have the expertise to work on.
Thinking outside the box, the resourceful Model A owner trailered the car to City Hall when Gov. Pete Ricketts was in his town for a meeting in February. On the car he posted an attention-grabbing sign: "Governor Please Grant This Car Clemency." But the answer has been the same: Forget about it.
https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a29023874/ford-model-a-classic-car-cant-register
https://www.facebook.com/groups/Fordmodelt/permalink/10162150521540548/
How about registering it in an adjacent state? Say, maybe South Dakota?
ReplyDeleteThere should be some way to clean up that title.
There's easier ways to get around the problem, but it looks like he's trying to fight the good fight, and get the govt to make something right instead, so that anyone else who has this problem won't have to deal with the hassle.
DeleteSince the source article also states that he runs a auto repair business, there might be many other cars that he looks at as profitable only if they can change the law, but which are currently just junk and worthless.
I'm guessing he's got some on the side he could make some money off of, if he does take this fight all the way, but unlike this model A, they aren't a perfect test case (like why so many legal cases are not taken to the supreme court, but should be, as they simply aren't clear cut enough to be a perfect example for a range of plaintiffs) that can make a change because prosecutors, judges, or law makers will find some fault with others.