You can check your name in the index at the land records office to determine if any liens have been recorded against you.
Yes. A lien will show up on your credit record whether you paid cash or mortgaged your property.
If there is a mortgage/equity loan involved,that loan will report on your credit history. The lien will report on the title of the house. A title search will be conducted if you are selling or refinancing the house.
You have to, it is a debt...it is just a secured debt...by the lien on the property.
If the lien is reported to your the 3 credit reporting agencies or even one as a collection it will effect your credit. If the lien is just on your home it will not effect your credit however you will have to pay the lien off when you sell or refinance your property. Also some of these liens have running interest which can be a shock in the future.
no,,,,,,but they can put a lien on it,,,and when you sell your house,,it has to pay the lien amount,,,before you get any money from the house.
It would not affect your credit at all because you are merely the tenant and are renting the property. Since you do not own it, and the owner is the person that has the lien filed against them, it will not affect you or your credit.
CAN CREDIT CARD COMPANIES OR THE AGENCIES THEY SELL YOUR DELIQUENT ACCOUNT TO PUT A LIEN ON YOUR HOME IN SOUTH CAROLINA AND IF SO WHAT ARE THE RULES ?
no
Yes. Any lien affects credit.Yes. Any lien affects credit.Yes. Any lien affects credit.Yes. Any lien affects credit.
Yes.
Yes, a credit card company can put a lien on your bank account or your house in North Carolina. They would have to go to court and obtain a judgment and will probably not do this unless you owe a large amount.
It depends. Some credit cards come to you as equity loans (you activate the card, it gives you a limit on the card equal to the equity on your house) and if you don't pay off the loan, the house belongs to the company. If it is a regular credit card and you don't pay, they may take you to court and win a judgment against you. That would allow them to put a lien on the house in the amount of the judgement. So, to answer your question, yes, there are ways that a credit card company can put a lien on your house.