What is a property tax lien listing? A list of properties that have tax liens or a list of tax liens that the county is offering for sale? The tax records are public and you can look up the property taxes for a property. If the county has filed a lien and it has gone unpaid that will also be in the county records. If the county chooses to sell Tax Lien Certificates (TLC) then you can find the information by contacting the county. The website for the county may have the needed info online. If there is an auction or some other process to sell TLCs it will be public info available from the county. Note that a few cities also sell TLCs. Not all states allows TLCs to be sold.
You can get a form for a court lien from the court in your county. You could also get one from an attorney in order to put a lien on the property.
That all depends on the type of lien. You will need to add more details.
Yes. The lien can be recorded against any one property owner's interest.
Yes. The lien can be recorded against the interest of the debtor. The property cannot be mortgaged or sold until the lien has been satisfied.
Yes, for example a lender that has a lien on the property.
I think you mean LIEN (not lian) holder. A lien holder is one (an individual or company) which holds the lien to a secured real or personal property.
If the property is owned by the husband and wife as tenants by the entirety a lien for the debt of one will not affect the property.
A lien encumbers the named property until it is paid or satisfied. In most cases the property cannot be transferred, sold or refinanced unless an agreement is reached with the lien holder. (The exception being marital property held as Tenancy By The Entirety when only one spouse is the judgment debtor). It is unclear what the term "taken to court" means. One possibility is that the lien has been perfected making it a secured debt and the lien holder is requesting the court to order a forced sale of the property.
As long as there is no lien on the property you can. If the civil suit is pending, then no judgment lien has attached to the property and you can buy it free and clear. If the civil suit relates directly to the property, the plaintiff may have put a lis pendens on it which is a type of pre-judgment lien that is permitted in some cases when the lawsuit is over the property itself. In addition, if the suit is for work done on the house by a contractor, there may be a mechanics' lien on the property. This is another pre-judgment lien that is permitted. In any event, if the civil suit is merely an action on a debt or a tort, the mere pendency of a civil suit does not create a lien on the property. Absent a lis pendens or mechanic's lien, the property may be purchased from the defendant and sold.
A person might place a lien on their own home if they were misinformed. The lien would be null and void. For a creditor, a lien creates an equitable interest in real property owned by another party. That other party owns the legal interest in the property. If a peron who owns the legal interest in property recorded a lien the two "interests" would "merge" in that same person and the lien would be nullified.
Yes. A court can overturn a conveyance if there was fraud involved or if there are conflicting interests and one party has a stronger claim to the property. A court can transfer ownership of property through the foreclosure of a judgment lien, property tax lien, income tax lien, forfeiture, etc.
No, there can be no title transfer, sale or refinancing until the lien is paid.