You need to speak to a lawyer (attorney) about this, the lien needs to be removed or you will have trouble selling the property in future. You will need to prove when you purchased the property and that you payed for it in full (or with a mortgage).
You have to track down the owners of the liens and pay them. Your local tax office or the tax office in which the property is located should be able to assist you in the location of the holders of the lien. If you bought the property with existing liens attached to it, you bought the liens too and are now responsible for them legally. Your only recourse would be to sue the previous owners for restitiuion of the cost of paying off the liens.
The siblings are the legal owners of the property so they would be legally liable. For example, if someone was injured on the property they would sue the legal owners. If the property taxes were not paid the legal owners would be liable and the property would be taken as against the legal owners.
Go to the assessor's office in the town hall or the tax collector's office depending on how big your town is. Also sometimes you can get information of previous property owners online. HOW
Track down the previous owners.
The Property Appraisers Office
You can discard property that is left on your property. In order to avoid problems, you should attempt to contact the owners first but you don't legally have to.
A tenancy by the entirety requires that the owners be legally married.
Absolutely not. The ONLY exception to this is if the 14yr old is driving on private property with both the vehicle owners and the property owners permission and under adult supervision.
Property owners are legally responsible for ensuring safe conditions on their property to prevent slip and fall accidents. The property owner may be held accountable if there were dangerous conditions on the property that caused the slip and fall.
Usually you will have to go to a government agency to get property tax information. Sometimes you will be able to talk to current or previous owners of the property though.
If the estates were properly probated (if necessary) and the real estate is in your name legally then you can sell your property.
Yes. The previous owners insurance policy coverage does Not pass through to a new owner. You can not ride off the previous owners insurance policy.If all you had was the previous owners insurance policy, Then you had no insurance at all. You and your property were effectively uninsured. If a loss occurred, payment would be denied based on the fact the the named insured (previous owner) no longer has an ownership interest in the property and the new owner never contracted for an insurance policy. The old policy does not belong to you as a new owner.The previous owners policy was a contract specific to that named owner and his or her owned property with the insurance company and was between them. Once they sell, it is no longer their property. A new owner is not a named insured under the terms of the previous owners policy. The previous owner being a relative does not change this..When a property sells or changes hands the previous owners Insurance Policy ceases the exact moment down to the exact hour minute and second of the day the property changes hands. All coverage under the previous owners policy stops, it is null and void whether or not the insurance company has yet been notified of the change in ownership.The new owner has a responsibility to purchase and qualify for his or her own insurance coverage. All Property Insurance policies are like this and it is clearly stated in the terms of the insurance contract.