A charging lien is the right to charge property in anothers possession with the payment of a debt or the carrying out of a duty the only way to remove it is to satisy the debt
Your property needs to be removed prior to the sale. Once the property has been sold you have no right to enter.
Depends how long it has been there.
In the UK it will depend on whether the property has been opted to tax. It is up to the owner of a property whether they opt to tax or not. Once the option has been made then VAT will be charged on the rent and the owner can reclaim the input tax on any expenses. The option will stay in place for 20 years. You cannot opt in and out of charging VAT.
If the property has already been gifted to you, it has been conveyed into your name The status of your mother is irrelevant for the purposes of determining ownership of the property. You should consult with an attorney who specializes in elder law. The look-back period for property transfers by elders who then receive medical assistance is five years in the US. That means the state can place a lien in the property for up to five years after the transfer has been recorded in the land records.
The past perfect progressive of "charge" is "had been charging." It is formed by using the past perfect auxiliary "had been" with the present participle "charging."
You must remove your personal property prior to the foreclosure sale. Once the property has been transferred you have no right to enter. Your property will be removed by a team of professionals and dumped.
No, if property has been foreclosed upon the notation will remain on the credit report for the required amount of time of seven years from date of foreclosure. A bankruptcy remains on the credit report for ten years.
I have a mobile home on my property that the bank is foreclosing on. The property was not in with the bank loan. They had the locks changed on the mobile home but it has been over two months and they have not came and removed it from my property. What can be done to get them to remove this from my property.
Assuming that all conditions have been met; 20 years for property owned by individuals, 30 years for property owned by the state government.
Get a lawyer and sue to "Partition to sell" said property.
Yes, if you have still been married for all that time - the law MAY give her a marital interest in property and possessions.
If a house has been foreclosed the lender has taken possession of the property and the borrower no longer owns it. Therefore the former owner has no right after the foreclosure to enter the premises. Arrangements to remove personal property should be made prior to the foreclosure sale.