A court order is the only legal avenue.
yes they can. But only for non payment of serives/ material. Not a credit card or credit lending company.
If the company holding a lien on a car ceases to exist, its assets are usually bought up or inherited by another company. A lien is an asset, so the lien continues to exist and you pay the money to the new owner. If the lien is held by one company but the car manufacturer ceases to exist, the lien stays the same.
They can sue you, eevn if you do appear they will probably get a judgement which gives them the power to lien/levy. The only way to get rid of them is a payoff or bk.
It is an outstanding unpaid bill that a company has claimed a lien on your account to pay for. It may be a car repossession that has never been paid off and all other contact has been ignored and/or the payment criteria has not been met.
I paid off my debt for a car eight years ago and TransSouth still has a lien on it how do I get a release of lien on the vehicle?????
In most states, a towing company can sell a vehicle without a pink slip or its title. However, the towing company, in most states, has to first file a lien on the vehicle for the fees of towing and storage. After the term of the lien expires, the towing company can get a title for the vehicle and sell it legally.
If the towing company has no liens or rights to your car, then no they have to give it back to you...they will need to provide a legal document showing you that they do have a lien or right. Nor do you HAVE TO PAY CASH to get it back. Some form of payment will do in the court of law. Call the police if you have an issue to get your car back.
If the lien demands the payment of money only, and you offer to pay the lien in full (including any interest and costs allowed by law), the lien claimant must release the lien upon such payment. Otherwise, the lien is a slander of title, and you will need to see a real estate attorney.
You can satisfy a lien by paying the assessments and other fees involved in filing the lien. Association counsel can prepare a release for you, for a fee, that you use to guide full payment and release of the lien.
Contact the finance company and get a lien release from them. With that lien release you can have them removed from the title. You cannot get the lien release unless you have paid the loan off in full.
They signed the release expecting final payment. It may have had to be done for them to receive payment, as a bookkeeping measure. In all honesty, they should be paid the full amount whether they signed their rights away or not.
If you owe overdue utility charges the utility company can sue for payment and record a judgment lien if it prevails.
If you no longer owe on the car and own it free and clear then it's your choice. You can pick it from the towing company or not. After a period of time, the towing company will place a lien on the vehicle and take ownership. If you still owe money on the car then you have a contractual responsibility to protect the vehicle from liens and you will still be responsible to pay what you owe to the finance company.
If you are buying a car on payments then there will be a lien on the car. the company will release the lien once the car is paid off.
PAYING a tax lien has no effect on your credit. What would affect your credit score would be to have the lien released. This is the legal disposition to a lien. Have the release recorded at the same courthouse and send the proof of payment and the release to the credit bureaus. Tax liens have no statute of limitations for how long they can show on your credit report. Having the release recorded and shown on your credit triggers the 7 year countdown for when these public records will be shielded. According to Experian the payment of a tax lien, (which do in fact have statute of limitations of 7 years from the date of payment)payment of a tax lien and the subsequent reporting of the release WILL have a negative effect on your credit score. The logic in the world of credit scoring is this; Once a payment has been made on an old account, this constitutes "activity" on a derogatory credit entry. Recent activity on a derogatory account (even though payment should be considered "good") is considered a negative when computing scores.
yes
A letter from the collection company or creditor who reported it or a lien release form if the judgment was placed in lien against property.