You can visit the land records office in your jurisdiction and check your name in the grantor index. The staff will assist you. If you need to go further back than your ownership you may need a professional title examination performed.
Yes. The lien can be recorded against the interest of the debtor. The property cannot be mortgaged or sold until the lien has been satisfied.
The deed is filed in the county courthouse. There will be a lien filed against it if there is a loan.
Sure they can, as many as can be filed. There is no limitation as to how many liens can be filed against one piece of property.
Once the owner has sold the property it's too late for you to file any lien against that property.
You must pay within 1 year after the tax lien has been filed. Any violation will lead to a federal transgression.
You need to sue for back rent and if you are successful you can request a judgment lien. The lien can be filed against the property.You need to sue for back rent and if you are successful you can request a judgment lien. The lien can be filed against the property.You need to sue for back rent and if you are successful you can request a judgment lien. The lien can be filed against the property.You need to sue for back rent and if you are successful you can request a judgment lien. The lien can be filed against the property.
A lien is a legal way to compel a person or company to pay a debt, usually in relation to the real property the lien is filed against.So if you entered into a contract to pay a portion of paving costs for a shared road and your inability or refusal to pay a lien might be filed against your property.If there is no direct connection between the real property and the debt then a lien would have to be filed after a court proceeding.Short answer:Yes if the pavement was on the property the lien was filed against.
This may vary by state. If the lien is placed against YOU, that being your wages, then it does not affect the property and it will have a clean title. If they file for a lien against your property, though, you will be required to pay off the lien before selling the property. I'd advise that you don't let the debt collector find out you have the property if you plan on selling it.
Each state is different, but a lien filed is only good for a certain amount of time in most cases. The person who filed has to either extend the lien on, i.e., a 6-month basis, or will have to sue to "perfect" the lien, which will then become a judgment against the person. A lien is only filed on a property.
Read your governing documents to determine whether you are personally liable for what you owe the association, or not. In any event, having a lien filed against the title for property you own will probably be noted on your credit reports, so you are implicated personally in that way when the lien is filed against the property.
You have 90 days from the last day on which labor was performed or goods provided to the property against which the lien will be filed.
To be effective against real property a judgment lien (or any other type of lien that affects real property) must be recorded ASAP in the land records office in the jurisdiction where the property is located.