You call the land registry office in that area and ask. OR you can get a credit check done on the person and see if they have land listed as an asset.
2006-07-09 01:44:01
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answer #1
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answered by SpankyTClown 4
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It depends on if you are wanting to find out the owner of a piece of property, or if you are wanting to find out if an individual owns any property in Ohio.
If you are wanting to find the owner of a piece of property, all you would need to to do is contact the County Tax Assessor's office where the property resides and get the name and address where the tax bills are mailed.
If you are looking to find out if a specific individual owns any property in a Ohio, that is much trickier and it will cost you to do so; you will need to hire a title company to do a search by owner name and may need additional information to narrow it down more and it can be quite costly...last time that I had one done is was $125 per name researched (if there are Jr. and Sr. or a reason to believe there is a different alias the person has bought property under, even James using "Jim"). Another drawback is it is not alway 100% accurate. There were several cases where we knew that a client owned additional property but it was not reflected on the title search; in this case, if you have documentation to prove it, they will do a new search and refund the fee that you paid for the original search.
2006-07-09 01:41:11
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answer #2
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answered by bottleblondemama 7
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You can log on to each county website. There is a place for you to enter their name. the record search will bring up any property the own in that particular county.
If the person you are seeking has put the property into an LLC (Limited Liability Corporation) or a trust, It will be difficult to locate the properties without knowing the exact name of the LLC or the trust.
That is all you can do for free. Even a credit check will not pull up all LLC's or trusts.
2006-07-09 02:19:20
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answer #3
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answered by Nick R 3
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1st - narrow down what county the person lives in. 2nd - run a yahoo search for the property appraiser in that county. 3rd - go to the property appraiser website and do a parcel record search.
2006-07-09 02:19:34
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answer #4
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answered by jaywigz311 1
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