What is the nature of your tenure? Are you a tenant? If so it might be quite difficult to establish, although clearly the most important person would be your landlord.
If you own the property then the main people with a hold on the house will be anyone from whom you have borrowed money guaranteed by the property (mortgage or secured loans).
If you do not own the freehold, then whoever does will also have a hold on the property but this is much more limited usually.
If your house is listed or in a conservation area, this restricts what you can do to it, which you might regard as a "hold" on your property.
Finally, there may be restrictive covenants which apply to the property (for example someone might have right of access to their property through your garden, etc, or there may be other restrictions on what you can do).
The normal way of finding all of these things is to perform a "search", which is normally undertaken by your solicitor when you buy the property. All of the leaseholds, covenants etc have to be registered, so you basically just look up the register. There are fees involved. Ask a solicitor who deals with property sales whether they'd do this for you and how much it would be.
2006-07-30 20:54:52
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answer #1
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answered by Graham I 6
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If you are in the UK...Land Registry, Gloucester. They will give you details by post for £4 or £2 via internet, do it yourself. They have a good website.
2006-07-31 04:18:08
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answer #2
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answered by reggie 4
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Your county's tax website. It will show all of the "liens" against your property. You need to check two places: the RECORDER'S office (a lien will not hold up unless it has been recorded) and the ASSESSOR'S office ~ which will show taxes owed, paid, et cetera.
2006-07-31 03:46:46
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answer #3
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answered by Sleek 7
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u need to take ec encomberence certificate from registerar office of ur area next u need to take khata from corporation office to see who has been paying taxes for that property .and if any tax is due
2006-07-31 08:26:03
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answer #4
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answered by why me 2
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try This site.
http://www.landregisteronline.gov.uk/
The next link is an example of the search.
http://www.landregisteronline.gov.uk/lro/resources/example_register.pdf
Good Luck.
2006-07-31 03:53:27
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Maybe you should go to your local real estate company and ask.
2006-07-31 04:05:50
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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if financial your mortgage provider,if lease or land the land register
2006-07-31 10:37:29
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answer #7
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answered by joseph m 4
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call real estate
2006-07-31 03:45:35
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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