In order to neutralize a lien that was recorded against your property you must arrange for the proper release to be recorded in the land records. You may need to seek the advice of an attorney if there are several different liens because releases are not effective unless drafted properly according to statutory requirements.
Nothing they are just unenforceable. If there are liens as a result get them vacated and you will have to have public record removed from your credit report if it still appears. Make sure deadline is really expired before you mess with it since can be renewed.
You cannot have liens or judgments removed unless you write the credit bureaus and give them a copy of your discharged bankruptcy. Some liens and judgments will not need to be paid but will still remain on your credit report.
no-it should still be there- if its not showing up on your computer it may be just a glitch
Yes. The liens are attached to the property. You should insist that the liens be paid before the transfer.
i think there are a few youtube videos showing how. i think it recwires a capture card. but I'm still learning myself.
Yes. And if it was subject to liens that weren't paid off when the property was transferred then the property is still subject to those liens and those creditors can still go after it.
If they were ordered by the court (i.e.: child support - back taxes - etc) you must still honor them, bankruptcy will not do away with court ordered liens. . Liens placed by private persons or businesses will have to take their place in your long line of creditors. As soon as you file, you take the papers from the bankruptcy court showing that you filed to your employer and the garnishment will stop. There are some exceptions to this.
Tax liens, especially real estate tax liens, take priority. Other liens, such as judgment liens, take a back seat. A property tax taking is often for much less than the property value, and if the debtor does not redeem the property by paying the tax due, the tax sale buyer gets a huge bonus. The other liens, including mortgages, go away, but the debtor still owes the money.
If it has been 19 years and something is still showing on a credit report, you can request to have it removed. Contact the three credit reporting bureaus and ask all of them to remove it for you.
It may not be, records on your credit report can expire and disapear but the debt still needs to be repaid
That's the whole point - if the request for expungement is granted by the judge the charge will NOT appear. It will be removed from the PUBLIC record. In the future only law enforcement, the courts, and government agencies will be able to have access to it.
no it is still on