You dont. You can avoid a lien up to the amount it impairs an exemption; otherwise, once perfected, a lien will only be removed if the pay off the lien.
No. They would need to obtain a judgment lien against you in court and provide proof that you asked them to pay your taxes and promised to pay them back. Otherwise, in Massachusetts, they would be considered a volunteer.
If a debt has been paid off, the lien holder is required to release the lien. If the lien holder refuses, you will need to get a lawyer and take the case to court
If the lien is a purchase money lien (granted to allow you to buy the car), then no. If it is a nonpurchase money lien (you granted a lien on the car to secure an unrelated debt), then yes.
Yes, they do let the lienholder know when it has been cancelled or if the full coverage has been cancelled.
Usually after a suitable release is filed in the property records. A release is obtained either from the lien-holder when the debt has been satisfied or by a court order (e.g., invalid or otherwise bogus liens).
A possessory lien is the right of the creditor to retain possession of his debtors property until his debt has been satisfied.
If the lien is attached to a valid debt, the only recourse the debtor has is to pay the amount of the lien. If the judgment debtor believes the lien to be faulty he or she has the legal right to file suit to have the lien removed from the encumbered property.
Generally, the lienholder gives the payor a document sometimes called a Warrant of Satisfaction, which gets recorded in the same office that shows the lien. The Warrant is proof that the debt has been paid and that the lien is no longer in effect. The lien is never "removed" in the sense that it won't appear in the public record or credit searches, but the warrant, being recorded in the same office as the lien, will show that the lien is now null and void. Check your own state's laws on this.
I think you may have meant "lien" instead of "lean". A lien is a monetary (money) debt placed against a possession by a creditor who has not been paid by other means. If an owner sells his cat on which a lien has previously been placed, the lien belongs to the person (i.e. the other person who owned the possession before); a lien does not "follow" the car or other possession, it follows the person who owes the debt. If a seller sold you a car with a lien against it, you need to contact an attorney to get the lien removed from your-now-owned car. You or your attorney needs to notify the creditor/lien holder that you bought the car without knowledge of the lien. The creditor would then need to identify a different possession owned by the other person in order to attach the lien to that possession, and not to your car.
A charging lien is the right to charge property in anothers possession with the payment of a debt or the carrying out of a duty the only way to remove it is to satisy the debt
Yes. As the "owner" of the debt, they can sell, or assign, the debt to anyone they please.
Pay the bill to bring the account up to date, including any penalty or advance collection and fee indicated in the default notice. The creditor will then be responsible for releasing the lien once the debt has been paid.