Tax liens will only be removed after they have been paid, been discharged through bankruptcy or the time to collect (statutes) have expired, or an agreed amount has been Paid thru the "Offer in Compromise" program.
it depends on what state you're in...in most county clerks offices where liens are filed, liens are filed against a name and not a specific property, and in many cases you will find liens filed against persons of similar name...no big deal...if you have a real estate closing, the title company may turn up the lien in its title commitment, but you sign an affidavit at closing stating that the lien is not against you but persons of similar name...if it shows on your credit report, contact the credit reporting agency and tell them the problem and have them verify the lien against your social security number
Dispute it through the credit bureaus(?). Depends on what you mean. Where is it showing up?
Pay the tax.
No, the mortgage is a debt of the estate. That mortgage must be resolved before the property can be transferred.
debt
debt
The Ucc-1 is a document that is filed with a court in the jurisdction where the property that it concerns is located. It gives you a priority over everyone else to sell that specific piece of property if a debt is not paid to you. Usually, they are used when money is lent to someone to purchase equipment or other property usually used in a business. If the loan is not repaid, no one else can sell that property before you to satisfy the debt.
Foolish
Yes. If the car is leased then you do not own it, it belongs to someone else (the leasing company), and you have no right to their property.
The answer depends on the details. It depends on why the horse is on someone else's property, whether there was a boarding agreement or whether the horse simply broke free from your property. If your horse is trespassing it must be removed immediately. If there was some reason why your horse was legally on another's property then you need to review that agreement.
You can effectively remove your name from a deed by executing a quitclaim on the property. However, this doesn't release you from paying the debt. If you were hoping to stick somoene else with the bill, no, it doesn't work that way.
Executing a Power of Attorney has nothing to do with your debt. A POA grants the attorney-in-fact the authority to act for you on your behalf by performing such tasks as your banking and bill paying, selling your home, managing your property, signing legal documents, etc. Your debt is your own responsibility. You can't assign it to someone else unless they agree to take responsibility for it in writing.
Its an algebra property(: ask someone else cause i got no idea!
If a person who owns property conveys it by deed before their death and they bequeathed the same property to someone else in their will, the deed prevails. If the property was already conveyed to someone else the property was not part of the estate assets when the testator died.
They owe them money and are repaying a debt or are loaning them some.