Of course having Prop taxes in your name is not a requirement for filing BK. For them to be included in your BK, you would have to prove they are a debt you are responsible for...perhaps through a lease or such...in which case the debt as part of the lease would be included.
Property taxes.
There are many websites where you can do your file taxes online for free like taxact.com or turbotax.com to name some of them. As long as they are reliable and secure it should be good.
File a Chapter 13 Bankruptcy It allows you to keep the property and make payments you can afford.
No. The owner of the property must pay the delinquent taxes. If the owner has died the estate must be probated in order for the heirs at law to acquire legal title. The town can take possession of the property and sell if for delinquent property taxes. The debt grows the longer the taxes remain unpaid. If you want to keep the property you should pay the taxes ASAP.
The owner of record is responsible for taxes and upkeep until a deed conveys the property into another name. The owner will be responsible from the Bankruptcy file date until the date of Trustee's Sale- even if the original sale date is postponed.
there r paricular forms for the particular tax. which tax.?
Sounds like the property is his. Either you pay the taxes and continue to live there or whatever or you let him not pay the taxes and "he" loses the property.
Property as in personal property.. a house? You need to go to your local clerk's office/courthouse and file the Deed. There is a recording fee and certified copy fee per the recorded document.
Yes
Probably not, because the municipality will merely seize the property and sell it for the taxes owed, regardless of whose name is on the deed. Any remaining proceeds go to other taxes, secured lenders, lien-holders, and then the owners of record (if anything is left).
That would be impossible as you describe. A fake ID would mean that the property owned would be in a fake name. Which is fine, but if it were contested, he would not have the property any more, not actually being "John Smith", the name on the deed. Also, property taxes must be paid each year no matter what name - real or fake - is on the deed. And if they aren't paid, then "John Smith" will lose the property.
how long can you leave house in deceased name