Absolutely, it would have to be satisfied or released when and if the home was ever sold.
You would be aware if a lien is placed on your property. You should receive notice and a copy of the lien.
Yes, but only after they sue you and win a judgment against you.
A lien is usually created on something when someone has used that something as collateral. Ex. A house that has been paid off can have a lien placed on it by taking a out a home equity loan. The house is now used as colateral. The lien is placed by the loan institution. Hope this helps.
They have to have permission from the courts or judge to have a lien placed on the property. It won't automatically transfer to another house.
If you have equity, yes
That would be the debtor.
Yes, a lien can be placed on a house for non-payment of a personal loan if the lender obtains a court judgment against the borrower. This legal process typically requires the lender to prove the debt in court, after which they can file a lien against the property. Once the lien is placed, it can affect the homeowner's ability to sell or refinance the property until the debt is settled. However, the specific rules and procedures can vary by state.
no,,,,,,but they can put a lien on it,,,and when you sell your house,,it has to pay the lien amount,,,before you get any money from the house.
To sell your home, you put a FOR SALE sign out front. If the value of the lien is less than what you will get out of the house, then when you sell the house and pay off the lien, you get the rest of the money. If the lien is for more than the house is worth and you are ready to move elsewhere, you hand the keys to the IRS and say. "Here, have fun. It is all yours." At that point you owe more on the house than the house is worth.
A lien can be placed upon any property if first, there is a judgment. You first have to have a judgment, where a debt is actually proven in a court of law, leaving a judgment. THen, if not satisfied, they certainly can lien your house. Anyone holding a judgment that is not satisfied can lien your house.
The lien doesn't usually affect after-acquired property unless it's an income tax lien. You cannot mortgage, refinance or sell the property against which the lien was recorded. That is exactly the purpose of recording a lien in the land records.
No, the judgment lien would be against the property owner(s) only.