It is possible to place a lien on unclaimed property, however more than a certified letter will be necessary. You should begin with the letter to notify the mobile home owner of your intentions, and if the home goes unmoved, you may file for a lien with the local courts. This will require further contact to serve the home owner.
No. Mobile homes are not real property.
The mobile phone should be declared as a personal property and not a real .property. This is because a mobile phone has a small shelf life.
A mobile home may be a personal property but this is not obligatory.
The mobile home owner has a right to personal property, NOT the landlord.
from what i believe (depending on the county/state) you wouldn't be paying the taxes on the mobile home, but rather the land it is sitting on. This is usually referred to as a tax lien. But most states have a set amount of time that you have to pay the back taxes on before you can obtain the property/mobile home (there is a legal process to obtain it too) Some states vary from 5-7 yrs
A sample copy of a voluntary mobile home repossession letter will have a number of tips which can be used for drafting your own. This will include details of the property in question, ownership details, location and so much more.
You send him a legal letter demanding the mobile be removed within a reasonable time ( ie a month) or you will seize it as rent owed.
I have a mobile home on my property that the bank is foreclosing on. The property was not in with the bank loan. They had the locks changed on the mobile home but it has been over two months and they have not came and removed it from my property. What can be done to get them to remove this from my property.
MH parks are generally private property anywhere.
Real estate is land; - the mobile home park in which mobile homes are parked would be real estate, but the mobile homes themselves are not real estate, they are the equivalent of large cars that you can live in. A car is personal property rather than real property, and so is a mobile home.
Yes, in most states in the United States you will pay either a personal property tax or real property tax on a trailer (also known as mobile home or manufactured home). Each state defines what constitutes personal property or real property as the terms relate to mobile homes but typically a mobile home that is permanently fixed to the site is considered real property. If you own land where a temporary mobile home has been placed you could receive a real property tax bill for the land and a personal property tax bill for the mobile home.
Yes. It is an asset. An asset includes personnel property you own.