You would be aware if a lien is placed on your property. You should receive notice and a copy of the lien.
That would be the debtor.
Yes, but only after they sue you and win a judgment against you.
Sure. The lien would pass to their inheritors just as any other asset.
A voluntary lien would be a mortgage.A voluntary lien would be a mortgage.A voluntary lien would be a mortgage.A voluntary lien would be a mortgage.
It would not affect your credit at all because you are merely the tenant and are renting the property. Since you do not own it, and the owner is the person that has the lien filed against them, it will not affect you or your credit.
A lien against bank owned property would not be effective unless the lien was against the bank. If you have a lien against the former owner your opportunity to try to enforce it has passed.
If you have a civil judgment or lien against you in South Carolina and you pay you house off, they can not take it directly from you. They may be able to put a lien against it until you pay the debt off.
Yes and no. The contractor can file a lien against your house for non-payment. Even if you honestly don't owe the contractor any money, he may still lien your house; he will eventually have to prove the lien's validity in court or it is automatically released. No lien can be filed against your car. However, if the contractor gets a judgment against you, that judgment may be executed against your car and home to secure payment.
Notarization has nothing to do with a house lien. As long as they are serving as a notary and being truthful there is no reason not to.
Yes, a lien can be filed on a piece of real property, regardless of the owner. However, the reason for the lien has to be directly related to the actual owner or the property itself. i.e., if a trust owns a house and I live in the house, and you have a judgement against me, there is no attaching a lien on the house for my debt.
A lien is a claim against the value of property, such as a house or a car. The property cannot legally be sold or transferred without settling the lien.
No, the judgment lien would be against the property owner(s) only.