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yes, but you have to return the deposit.
It is not your property when you have sold it to someone else or when you have not payed your rent or money off. If you have not keep up on your payments you can possibly lose your whole property. :) It is either your property or not your property. It cannot be your property at the same time as not your property.
No. A deed is the instrument by which real property is transferred.
If the quitclaim was not recorded properly but YOUR transaction was, you own it. * If the property did not have a clear title before it was sold, the transaction is null and void. The buyer should contact an attorney, as such a matter is likely to result in lengthy and expensive litigation.
Real property can only be sold by the executor of the estate. A beneficiary is not allowed to sell the property.
When a property of a home is sold, the tax amount is called the real market value. The actual value of the home would have to be determined by an appraiser.
In this scenario, the owner is typically responsible for paying property taxes, even if they do not live on the property. The life tenant, as the person living on the property and benefiting from it, does not typically have a legal obligation to pay property taxes unless specified otherwise in their agreement with the owner.
A property should be sold with a top real estate agent to maximize the selling's profit. A top real estate agent should know what they are doing and what are the market values.
The property is in escrow or sold.
The property cannot be sold or mortgaged until the lien has been paid.
When a judgment is recorded in the land records it becomes a judgment lien against the debtor's real property. That property cannot be sold or mortgaged until the lien is paid.When a judgment is recorded in the land records it becomes a judgment lien against the debtor's real property. That property cannot be sold or mortgaged until the lien is paid.When a judgment is recorded in the land records it becomes a judgment lien against the debtor's real property. That property cannot be sold or mortgaged until the lien is paid.When a judgment is recorded in the land records it becomes a judgment lien against the debtor's real property. That property cannot be sold or mortgaged until the lien is paid.
Carry on with your transfer paperwork, it's not your problem what they do with it after you have sold it to them, it becomes their problem.