Until you pay the pawn man. You then need the pawn shop to cancel the lien and have it approved at the dmv.
sad but TRUE, it sho DO.
Forever. But what you can do is ask for a release of lien from the dealer. Once you get a release of lien from the dealer, you go threw the normal titled process in your state to obtain a lost title.
Until the lien is paid.
An unpaid tax lien will stay indefinitely, paid for seven years.
They can stay on your record for a very long time. Seven years at least.
Until such time as all debts incurred for the purchase of the car are paid off
Every type of lien has its own statute of limitations. You would need to research the type of lien.
It's permanent because there is a judgement. The only way around it is if you can bk it, get it discharged then there is a form to have the judgement/lien thrown out.
Liens have different statutes of limitation depending on the type of lien and those time periods vary by state. You need to add more details.
Unpaid tax liens remain 15 years from the filing date. Paid tax liens remain 7 years from the paid date of the lien.
If the credit card company who put the lien on your property won a lawsuit - making it a judgement, then the charges never go away. When you sell the property, the first monies you get will go to them.
A tax lien is when the IRS files a lien against a tax payer in the courthouse where the taxpayer lives. This lien will attach the the property the tax payer owns. The lien will stay in place until the lien is satisfied or the liability is paid. The lien does not need to be renewd.