Only if the landlord agreed to pay for those improvements. Normally, you would not be reimbursed for the cost of repairs or improvements you did not have permission to make. In fact, you might be responsible for paying to restore the property to its original condition if the landlord did not like your improvements.
If there were improvements made on the home or a loan taken out against the property, and they person/company goes through the proper steps, yes. The property being in trust does not affect that ability.
Renovations, repairs and/or improvements made to one's home are not tax deductible and neither are your power bill, phone bill, house payment, etc.
No. If processed correctly the check will be made out to you and the lien holder.No. If processed correctly the check will be made out to you and the lien holder.No. If processed correctly the check will be made out to you and the lien holder.No. If processed correctly the check will be made out to you and the lien holder.
The value of a house is determined by the location, year it was made, quality of the house, quality of the surrounding property, interior design, and any improvements done to the house.
If you owned the house in your sole name before the marriage, not unless you made her a co-owner.
You can't just file a valid lien against a company. You have to have a statutory right to a lien on specific property. Therefore, unless you made improvements to their real estate, or did work on their vehicle, or are their attorney, or provided medical services, the only way you can claim a valid lien is to first sue the company and obtain a judgment. Then the judgment can be a lien against the company's real estate and you can also execute against its assets.
The improvements were made to PATA to allow for the programs to load faster. The improvements are made to make navigation easier as well.
Improvements were made to television to make tv experience better.
We were taken by a vandal " attorney ", in purchasing a house been sold by this thief, back in 2004, at the time of signing a contract he did not want to sign it, later on in the transaction he could not deliver the house to us, he gave us the keys the to house, we made improvements to this house for a value of 20K, we have to sue him, our attorney acted like a chicken in this case, he had bad arguments with the judge, we wen to a jury trial, we won the case, the judge overturned, based on I do not know what. This guy not only did not pay us what we invested in that house but now we have lien in our house. Can you prove us with some help? we are have our last chance in court next August. Thanks,
A Claim of Lien is a formal and recorded notice that a lien has been placed on property. In Florida, if the lien results from improvement made to a personal residence the lienor may take action to enforce the lien, which can include foreclosure on your home and a forced sale on the court house steps. A construction lien "expires" or becomes unenforceable 365 days after it was recorded. If you receive a Claim of Lien take it very seriously, do not ignore it, speak to a Florida attorney with proficiency in construction law.
Contact the institution that has the lien on the vehicle. Only they can release the lien once you have made all the payments.
If you have a lease until the end of the lease. otherwise a couple of weeks depending on the agreement that you made with the agent or owner.