No, if it is your debt only and your name is not on the car. Unless you used the car for collateral for a loan, they can't put a "lien" on it anyway.
It does not follow. The lien of the debt collector comes after the mortgage loan. Which means that the debt collector still may not be able to collect any money.
Yes. As the "owner" of the debt, they can sell, or assign, the debt to anyone they please.
yes
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i paid taxes on a property. i want to know how to place a lien on that property for the amount paid.
A property lien is an attachment to the property, not the debtor. The answer would be "no", that won't help you get out of paying the debt.
Yes, a debt collector lawyer can potentially put a lien on your house regardless of whether you have young children. The decision to put a lien on the property would typically depend on the laws and regulations governing debt collection in your specific jurisdiction and the circumstances surrounding the debt. Having young children does not automatically exempt you from actions taken by debt collectors.
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.
The spouse is not personally responsible for the medical bills, unless they co-signed them. However, the estate is responsible. Which means that the estate may be depleted and a lien placed on the house. The spouse may not inherit anything.
No. To be able to repossess any of your property, they must hold a lien on it. If they have no lien on it, they have no right to repossess. Their only option is to take you to court.
The laws presume that the spouse inherits at least half, if not all, of the other spouse's assets. But the estate has to liquidate all debts before they can transfer any assets to the spouse. One way or another, the spouse ends up paying the debt. The spouse has some right in all real property owned by the husband. If the assets are not enough to cover the debt, the real property may have a lien placed against it to cover those debts.
Can a collection agency place a lien on a home belonging to a spouse not on title?