Определение liens в Английский Язык Английский Язык словарь
A restriction on a certain parcel of property that usually reflects an amount of money due to a third party from the owner of the property, which may or may not be related to the property Examples are liens, and mechanic's liens tax liens, judgment
Any type of financial instrument secured by your property Life Insurance Face Amount Life insurance face amount refers to the death benefit paid by a term or whole life policy
A charge upon or security interest in real or personal property maintained to ensure the satisfaction of a debt or duty ordinarily arising by operation of law
A legal claim on the property of a borrower pledged as a security for the payment of a debt If the debt is not repaid as promised, the lender or the lien holder can enforce his/her claim on the property and compel the sale of the property to pay off the debt (e g ,see Mechanic's Lien)
that successively attaches to such assets as a person may have from time to time, leaving him more or less free to dispose of or encumber them as if no such charge or lien existed
A claim against a property for the payment of a debt A mortgage is a lien; other types of liens a property might have include a tax lien for overdue taxes or a mechanics lien for unpaid debt to a subcontractor
A claim or charge on property for payment of some debt With respect to a mortgage, it is the right of the lender to take the title to your property if you do not make the payments due on the mortgage
A legal claim; a charge upon real or personal property for the satisfaction of some debt or duty; a right in one to control or hold and retain the property of another until some claim of the former is paid or satisfied
A recorded claim against a property whereby the property is held as security for a debt Under certain circumstances, the holder of the lien is entitled to have the property sold to satisfy the debt
A claim on property to prevent the sale or transfer of that property until a debt is paid The lien may be enforced or collected by levying on the property (See also levy )
the legal right to keep something that belongs to someone who owes you money, until the debt has been paid (ligamen, from ligare ). In law, a charge or encumbrance on property for the satisfaction of a debt or other duty. Common law developed two kinds of possessory lien: the specific (a lien on the specific property involved in a transaction) and the general (a lien for the satisfaction of a balance due, not confined to a specific property involved in a transaction). Courts of equity may, through the device of the equitable lien, recognize a creditor's interest in a debtor's property. Statutory liens are also available; developers and building contractors, for example, may use their interest in an improved site as security for payment (a mechanic's lien)
A legal claim against another person's property as security for a debt A lien does not convey ownership of the property, but gives the lienholder a right to have his or her debt satisfied out of the proceeds of the property if the debt is not otherwise paid
A property right which remains attached to an object that has been sold, but not totally paid for, until complete payment has been made It may involve possession of the object until the debt is paid or it may be registered against the object (especially if the object is real estate) Ultimately, a lien can be enforced by a court sale of the property to which it attached and then the debt is paid off from the proceeds of the sale
A legal claim by one party against the property of another as security for a debt Must be paid off when property is sold A mortgage or a first trust deed is a lien
A legal claim on the property that acts as a security for the payment of a debt If the debt is not repaid as promised, the lender or the lienholder can foreclose its claim on the property and force a public sale to pay the debt
A claim by a party on the property of another for payment of a debt or obligation It is not a right to the property itself, but rather stops the owner from doing anything with it The lien may be enforced or collected by levying on the property (see Levy)