The lien on the property is always a lien. Liens convey with a property if not paid off. The new owner is responsible for getting the lien paid. The new owner can always sue the previous owner for payment of this lien. My recommendation is to begin foreclosure proceedings on the property. The new owner will not be able to sell or refinance with a foreclosure looming over them. And that should scare the title company into being ethical about the whole deal.
Hire an attorney to begin the foreclosure proceedings as soon as possible. Take a copy of the lien to your attorney. He/she will be able to tell you who the beneficiary and trustee is. Most often the trustee is an uninterested person, not the person who is owed. I wouldn't trust anything that this Title Company says.
2006-11-25 05:16:10
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answer #1
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answered by KC 5
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Let me start by saying that liens run with the property, not with the individuals. So, when the original borrower sold the property they were required to pay off the deed of trust in order to present their buyer with a clear title. That being said, I'd suggest going to a real estate attorney and explaining the situation to them so that they can begin foreclosure proceedings.
I'm not clear on what exactly the title company means by saying that you are the trustee and the lien holder. In a Deed of Trust, there are three parties: the trustor (i.e. borrower), the trustee (the person or entity that holds the property in trust until the terms of the deed of trust are fulfilled), and the beneficiary (the one who loans the money). If they're saying that you are both the beneficiary and the trustee, then you do not have a deed of trust, you basically have a mortgage, which are not permissable in some states. Perhaps this title company is using a different set of terminology than I'm used to, but this could be a problem. So I strongly recommend talking to a real estate attorney.
I hope this works out for you, Good luck!
2006-11-25 06:04:55
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answer #2
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answered by Sithein 3
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Start foreclosure proceedings.
That will cause somebody to do whatever needs to be done. The current owner cannot sell the house right now if the buyer is getting a loan or wants a title policy.
If you do end up foreclosing, you will have to pay off the first lien. Unless it's an owner carry to the person who you filed against in the first place.
You might end up getting the house with little or no other liens on it - talk to a real estate attorney in the state the house is in.
2006-11-25 05:11:52
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answer #3
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answered by teran_realtor 7
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. what variety of deed did you get? a guarantee deed from the broking states that he avows that there is not any liens on the valuables.in case you went with the aid of a identify business corporation you'll be ok.you're likely ok any way,you ought to not would desire to pay something. All it ability it that the financial enterprise who gave the previous proprietor the loan did not record the lien launch. this is not uncommon. Your lender or the previous proprietor in basic terms desires to call the financial enterprise of loan business corporation and ask them to record the lien launch. in the event that they say it substitute into recorded already ask them for the recording style of the launch. some circumstances while a identify business corporation is calling for liens and releases, they don't discover them, because of the fact they are looking incorrectly, or using a incorrect call to seek. now and returned the unique lien is below one call, and the launch is below yet another. Like bill Smith for the lien and William Smith for the launch. Or with women getting married and the lien is below her maiden call and the launch is below her married call. human beings now and returned even use there center names as a substitute of there first names.Then while the identify business corporation is calling, they don't have the the final option call to seek. on the grounds which you're sleepless any way, many recorders have there public records on line, and you will seek for a lien launch your self. bypass to Yahoo or google and style on your county's call accompanied with the aid of recorder.
2016-10-13 02:19:15
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Your lien should block the sale and the transfer of title.
People need to be aware when purchasing property that this can occur and it means you cannot legally own the property.
Get a lawyer and demand to be paid or stop any sale/re-financing as your money is due. No bank will lend her money with a lien on the property floating around and not being paid.
Good luck.
2006-11-25 05:14:21
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answer #5
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answered by Gem 7
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Ok, lots of chaff in your question.
The bottom line is the lien is on the property. It stays on the property until paid or released.
If the new owner has title insurance (which deosn't sound like it) then he would ask them to pay b/c they missed it on the sale.
If no, the new owner is liable, or the property is liable, and you can sue to force a forclosure sale to get your due.
The new owner would then sue the person who sold the house to them.
Get a real estate lawyer.
2006-11-25 07:19:20
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answer #6
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answered by t S 4
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I was a loan officer for a few years. This much I know, Lenders, Title Companies and Loan officers can all make mistakes. I would defiantly get an attorney. Due to the timing and someone else's mistake, you might not be liable at all. Good luck!
2006-11-25 05:11:05
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answer #7
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answered by Red! 2
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I would tell them that if they don't pay up, you'll take an attorney and his fees will go on top. Final warning. Tell them you will foreclose on the property!
Then get an attorney who has experience with this type of case!
2006-11-25 05:08:34
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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