The IRS can put a lien on your home for past due child support and they will even charge interest.
Only under very special circumstances. You must meet all of the regular qualifications for Head of Household and, in addition, your spouse must not have lived in your home at any time during the last six months of the year. Temporary absences such as illness, business, or military service count as living in your home unless the spouse cannot be reasonably expected to return.
Maybe. If each of you paid one-half of the property tax, then each may deduct one-half. A deduction may be taken only by the person who was required to pay it and who actually paid it. If only one spouse paid the property tax, that spouse may deduct it. If one spouse itemizes deductions, the other spouse must also itemize, even if the first spouse is entitled to all of the deductions; i.e., the other spouse has few or no deductions.
Can a resident file a resident joint return if the spouse only has a B-1 or B-2 visa
If all property was jointly owned then ownership automatically passed to the surviving spouse. There is no need to open an estate proceeding.
Only if you are a party to the levy execution.
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.
If the judgment lien was placed before the divorce and not paid or settled the property could not have been conveyed to another party regardless of the terms divorce decree. If the couple lived in a community property state the property lien is against both of them even though only one spouse incurred the debt and the awarding of the home in the divorce decree is irrelevant as to the validity of the judgment. Before the deed can be conveyed to the spouse who was awarded the property the judgment will have to be paid or settled according to the terms of the lien holder.
No, Indiana is not a community property state. Indiana is a Tenancy By The Entirety state which means jointly owned marital property passes directly to the surviving spouse and is not subject to probate procedure not creditor attachment when the deceased spouse was the sole debtor.
Yes and no. It depends on the state that you live in. See an attorney.
The estate of the deceased is responsible for the debts. The spouse is going to have to pay the debt as a beneficiary of the home purchased by the spouse.
No. Every mortgage is secured by a lien. The lien only ensures that the lien holder is reimbursed upon sale of the property. There can actually be several lien holders on a single property, and each will be paid in turn.
Only if the parents cosigned the note.
It is only mandatory if you have a mortgage or lien on the home.
The only way to remove an active lien is to pay it off. You cannot sell or mortgage your home until the lien is paid.
I can only assume you are asking how can someone put a lien on a home in Canada? The owner of the home would have to owe you or the government a lot of money before you could put a lien on their home and even if it was a private affair I'm not 100% sure a private party can put a lien on someone's home. It's usually banks and or money owed to governments who put liens on a persons home.
The only way a person can obtain a lien on a home is for the homeowner to agree to the lien in writing or the lender must sue the homeowner in court for non-payment of the car loan. If they win they can request a judgment lien from the court and that lien can be recorded in the land records. The property cannot be sold or mortgaged until the lien is paid off.The only way a person can obtain a lien on a home is for the homeowner to agree to the lien in writing or the lender must sue the homeowner in court for non-payment of the car loan. If they win they can request a judgment lien from the court and that lien can be recorded in the land records. The property cannot be sold or mortgaged until the lien is paid off.The only way a person can obtain a lien on a home is for the homeowner to agree to the lien in writing or the lender must sue the homeowner in court for non-payment of the car loan. If they win they can request a judgment lien from the court and that lien can be recorded in the land records. The property cannot be sold or mortgaged until the lien is paid off.The only way a person can obtain a lien on a home is for the homeowner to agree to the lien in writing or the lender must sue the homeowner in court for non-payment of the car loan. If they win they can request a judgment lien from the court and that lien can be recorded in the land records. The property cannot be sold or mortgaged until the lien is paid off.
Normally a non-borrowering Spouse will Sign Pro-forma on a loan involving a Homestead. All owners and spouses must be put on notice that lien is being placed on the Homestead. So even if the Spouse isn't named in the property records as an owner, they must sign the Deed of Trust "pro-forma" to insure it is a valid lien on the property.