Contact the tax office and ask about a settlement or payment options.
No, paying property taxes on a property does not make you the property owner. Only a properly executed deed naming you as the owner would make you an owner.
If you want to appeal your property taxes you will need to know how this process is done. Your attorney can help you with the appeal process, but there isn't much of an appeal other than paying the balance due.
Before 1920, most taxes were assessed on property. When all taxes are based on property, it makes sense to restrict voting to property owners. When non-property owners are voting on property TAXES, the non-owner is has no reason not to vote for higher taxes that he won't be paying. Since the advent of the income tax, even people who don't own property are paying taxes, so the voter rolls needed to be expanded. Here in 2014, the disconnect between paying taxes and voting is becoming bad again.
No because you own the property and you would be the that one that should be paying the property taxes.
You should not have to pay more taxes on the property but you will be paying more taxes on the people using the property. The property is going to be the same because they go by the land value and that is how they figure out your taxes.
You don't. If you rent the person who rents to you pays taxes on the property which includes school taxes and your rent helps him pay for the taxes. So, in a round about way you pay for them by paying him.
Paying the taxes alone, no. If others are named on the deed, you'll need to work with them, period. All named individuals own the property equally. The court doesn't care who pays the taxes as long as they're being paid. Stop paying the taxes, and all of you risk losing the property.
Yes, you always have to pay taxes on an inheritance property. The percentage would be depend on the property value. is it from dollar one or is there a set amount that you can inherit without paying taxes?
Answer:If you pay someone's property taxes you would be considered a volunteer. That wouldn't give you any fee interest in the property.Occasionally, tax authorities will put a property with seriously delinquent tax payments up for sale and then you could buy the property for the cost of taxes. Contact your local city or county treasurer who handles the property taxes for your area.
that is only possible if your home is in a "under construction status"
If the town takes your property for non-payment of property taxes then you lose all rights in the property unless you redeem the land by paying the delinquent taxes.
He can if he is paying them and you have not claimed them already on your taxes.