do i need a lawyer to do a title search for liens against realestate properties?
October 28th, 2009 | by admin |in washington co pa
Although there is no legal compulsion but yes, you need a lawyer to do a title search for liens against a real-estate property. Because the lawyers are well aware of the nitty-gritty of the title search. Also lawyers can also explain you the real position of the title like is it a freehold estate, a leasehold estate or anything else. You yourself will not be able to identify them.
Go to legal500.com or any other site to find a good lawyer in the Washington co PA
8 Responses to “do i need a lawyer to do a title search for liens against realestate properties?”
By Prakash on Oct 28, 2009 | Reply
Find from the links in http://www.hot8sites.com/lawyer/
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By oil field trash on Oct 28, 2009 | Reply
Most places you can do this yourself by going to the county records office. You will need the legal description of the property you are interested in.
In our locale, title companies ignore any lien that is more than 5 years old. If you pay a title company to do the search, you need to be aware of this possibility.
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By KingOfTheInternet on Oct 28, 2009 | Reply
Although there is no legal compulsion but yes, you need a lawyer to do a title search for liens against a real-estate property. Because the lawyers are well aware of the nitty-gritty of the title search. Also lawyers can also explain you the real position of the title like is it a freehold estate, a leasehold estate or anything else. You yourself will not be able to identify them.
Go to legal500.com or any other site to find a good lawyer in the Washington co PA
References :
By Jordan K on Oct 28, 2009 | Reply
I would not do this myself. There could be a lien from 30 years ago on the property. Have someone else do it and then buy title insurance (usually $250 or less). It will cover you if a lien is found at a later date.
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By newmexicorealestateforms on Oct 28, 2009 | Reply
You need a lawyer to review the results of a title search.
You can do the title search for liens yourself since these are public records but I recommend that you order the search from a title company.
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http://www.realestateformnm.com
By akc1106 on Oct 28, 2009 | Reply
You don’t need a lawyer, you can call a title company. That’s what they are there for!
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By MLaw on Oct 29, 2009 | Reply
If you are looking for a particular lien or for liens in a narrow date range, you can probably do it yourself. You’ll have to go to the courthouse or wherever property records are kept & teach yourself how to search the index & retrieve copies. If you are doing a general title search for all claims & liens; you need to contact a title company or lawyer who can do the search & understand & evaluate title instruments far more efficiently than you can.
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By AllCourt on Oct 29, 2009 | Reply
Nope. You can do it yourself. I would encourage anyone looking at a lot of properties with the intent to locate investments to find out how to do it themselves. It’s a good way to make friends in the courthouse/records offices, and can save you money on formal title searches on properties that you decide to not to pursue. When you’ve gathered enough info to know what kind of deal you have, you can pay for a formal title/abstract through a title attorney when/if it makes sense for you to have that done
In fact, <shhhh> many title companies send people <shhhh> who are <shhh> NOT ATTORNEYS to do these searches. You actually meet these people when you hang out in the county recorder/real property offices and they can be very helpful <shhhh>
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