You can get a form for a court lien from the court in your county. You could also get one from an attorney in order to put a lien on the property.
in Texas the answer is YES ... The utility would file the appropriate form with the county clerk. The lien does not require renewal and remains in effect until cancelled.
If you owe overdue utility charges the utility company can sue for payment and record a judgment lien if it prevails.
When an association owns a property, it can rent the property. In this case, the association probably doesn't own the property, else why has a lien been filed. The property owner's title is clouded by the lien, and the property is still owned by the owner. The association may want to work with the owner to rent the property, to produce an income stream. The final decision, however, remains with the property owner.
No. The purpose of a lien is to notify the world that someone has some type of claim against your property or some form of interest in it. The property would remain subject to the lien
To place a lien on someone's real estate you must obtain a court order that can be recorded in the land records.
File a lawsuit in the appropriate court in the city or county where the debtor owns property.
It is a form showing that the lender on the property has a lien against the property until it is paid in full. The form is for personal property only, not real estate
A lien is considered personal property.A lien is considered personal property.A lien is considered personal property.A lien is considered personal property.
Sure. A lien is just a notice to the county recorder that the builder has a financial interest in the property. Putting the lien on the property just assures that the property will not be sold until his interests are satisfied and that if he meets his obligations and he is still not paid, he may forclose on the property. Putting a lien on the property is often a way to assure that a first mortgage cannot be put on the property until the builders interests are satisfied. On the other hand, if he tries to forclose before his obligations are met, he may be in some pretty serious trouble, depending on the laws in your state.
There is a lien or was a lien on the property and the lien was sold to a 3rd party such as an attorney
Yes, you can get a lien on your homesteaded property in Florida. A court will put a lien on the property if money is owed in a judgement.
That depends on your states requirements for its lien process. Generally speaking you normally send them a "Notice of Intent to Lien" by some form of 3rd party delivery (registered mail, courier, etc); and it goes to all interested parties. To translate if you are putting the lien on real property (a house for instance) you must contact everyone with interest in the property (mortgage companies, owners, co-signers, etc.).