You need to have an attorney draft a mortgage and record it in the land records in order to create a lien on the property.
You need to have an attorney draft a mortgage and record it in the land records in order to create a lien on the property.
You need to have an attorney draft a mortgage and record it in the land records in order to create a lien on the property.
You need to have an attorney draft a mortgage and record it in the land records in order to create a lien on the property.
Yes, you can put a lien on a bonded title.
If you are the rightful owner of the car, you could file for lost title. Otherwise, I'm not sure it would be legal. If you default on your loan, without a title the lien holder would have a difficult time collecting
If you don't hold the title to that truck, you have nothing to put a lien on. The title holder is the actual legal owner of that vehicle, and when you say you're saying that you're leasing it from your "employer" (in reality, you, as a lease operator would be a 1099 contractor, not an employee), it tells me they hold the title on the truck, and already have a lien on it, as well.You have nothing to put a lien on, plain and simple.
A person or a company that puts a lien on a vehicle is a "lien holder" that is on the title. It is not recognized as ownership.
The car belongs to the person listed as the owner on the title. Listing someone as the lien holder does not make them the owner.You can't transfer a motor vehicle when you know there's a lien on it. The lien would be reflected on the title and a prudent buyer wouldn't take title that is encumbered by a lien.
A lien clouds title to a property, which means that the property owner may not successfully transfer title to another owner until the lien is satisfied. As buyer, you are entitled to a 'clean title' to the property. The association may not file a lien against a new buyer upon purchase, since the new buyer is not obligated to pay assessments until the date of purchase and beyond.
Record lien on title- as 1st lien holder
as long as you physically have the title in your possession and its in your name and they haven't signed the back, you are still the legal owner. A title company would have to give proof of your financial obligation to them
you can get a bonded title. or put a mechanics lien on it
The only way that a person could register a car in one name and title it to another in CA would be if you put the person who is going to operate the vehicle as the "Registered Owner" and put the other person on as the "Legal Owner" This would mean the person who is listed as the "Lien Holder" would receive the title and the vehicle can not be sold or transferred without the lien holder signing off the title. Vehicle Registration Wizards @ vehregwizard@gmail.com
Yes, if you left it for repairs in a shop and did not pay for repairs, they can put a mechanics lien on it, also if your car was towed and you did not take it out of storage they can put a storage lien on it. Sometimes even when you finance a car if they accidentally forget to add a lien and you receive the title, they can still add the lien with the contract or agreement they have signed by you.
they can put a lien on your title,its called a mechanics lien