You need to provide more details. A deed in lieu is a deed from a borrower to a lender in lieu of a foreclosure. That does not seem to be your case. You can provide more detail on the discussion page.
You need to provide more details. A deed in lieu is a deed from a borrower to a lender in lieu of a foreclosure. That does not seem to be your case. You can provide more detail on the discussion page.
You need to provide more details. A deed in lieu is a deed from a borrower to a lender in lieu of a foreclosure. That does not seem to be your case. You can provide more detail on the discussion page.
You need to provide more details. A deed in lieu is a deed from a borrower to a lender in lieu of a foreclosure. That does not seem to be your case. You can provide more detail on the discussion page.
You need to provide more details. A deed in lieu is a deed from a borrower to a lender in lieu of a foreclosure. That does not seem to be your case. You can provide more detail on the discussion page.
It is called 'deed in lieu of foreclosure'.
The executor of an estate always has the ability to sell property if allowed by the will. As long as the court agrees, the desires of the beneficiaries is secondary.
yes you can, provided the owner of the property agrees to mortgage it for the loan
You can refinance your property if a bank agrees to refinance your property. If they find out you are separated, they could choose not to lend you more money.
It all depends on the description of the property covered by the mortgage. If the entire property was described in the mortgage the bank owns an interest in it. A half cannot be sold unless the bank agrees to partially release that portion from the mortgage.It all depends on the description of the property covered by the mortgage. If the entire property was described in the mortgage the bank owns an interest in it. A half cannot be sold unless the bank agrees to partially release that portion from the mortgage.It all depends on the description of the property covered by the mortgage. If the entire property was described in the mortgage the bank owns an interest in it. A half cannot be sold unless the bank agrees to partially release that portion from the mortgage.It all depends on the description of the property covered by the mortgage. If the entire property was described in the mortgage the bank owns an interest in it. A half cannot be sold unless the bank agrees to partially release that portion from the mortgage.
sikret
Yes, if the executor approves. It needs to be beneficial to the estate to do so and at a market price.
Your father has no interest or rights in the property. Your sister owns it. Your father can only get his property back if your sister agrees to execute a deed that conveys it back to him.
An indentured servant is a person who agrees to work for another person without pay for a certain length of time.!!
There are no homophones for the word agrees.
A short sale is where the lender agrees to allow the mortgagor to sell the property for less than what they owe on the loan (because the value of the property is less than the loan amount and therefore that's all it can be sold for).
Indentured servant