The owner of the property pays the tax on the income generated by the property. This is known as the "fruit of the tree doctrine."
The Trust does and it becomes a deduction on the Trust's tax return.
In the United States of America, county level tax assessors keep track of the assessed value of the property and the amount of taxes due and amount paid. These are public records.
Property taxes are the responsibility of the owner. Unless there is a clause in the lease saying otherwise, the renter/leasor is not obligated to pay them. The government will place a lien on the property.
The Massachusetts sales tax is 5 percent of the sales price or rental charge of tangible personal property or certain telecommunications services sold or rented in the Commonwealth. (For a detailed definition of "sales price," please see M.G.L. Chapter.64H, Section 1). The sales tax generally is paid to the vendor as an addition to the purchase price. The buyer pays the sales tax to the vendor at the time of purchase; the vendor then remits the tax to the Commonwealth. Hence, the tax is on personal property and rental charges only, not labor. However if labor is a component part of making the personal property, it is then part of the sales price.
The state pays the property tax.
The trustee or the administrator of the trust or the beneficiaries would be responsible for paying the taxes that may be due when the property is sold.
Buyer pays tax.
The owner of the property pays the tax on the income generated by the property. This is known as the "fruit of the tree doctrine."
Typically, if the back taxes are paid by anyone before the tax sale, ownership of the property does not change. If there was a written agreement between the owners and the person who paid the taxes that stated that the owners agreed to deed the property to the tax-payer after the tax-payer paid the taxes, then the agreement could be enforced as a legally binding contract and the owners could be forced to deed the property to the tax-payer. However, the owners remain the owners until they deed the property to someone else or until the property is sold at a tax sale or other type of foreclosure.
In most areas there is at least one and, legally it isn't on the ownership exactly, but a tax the property itself pays...it is due from the property not the owner...but the owner pays it to keep the property from being taken because it owes taxes.
The Trust does and it becomes a deduction on the Trust's tax return.
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Usually the owner of the property is the one that pays the property taxes on the owners property. Some time the mortgage company will pay them from a escrow account but the money that is in the escrow account comes from the property owners monthly payments.
Usually an owner pays property taxes on real estate property s/he owns. Depending on the tax, there may be another answer.
Because the person paying it pays the gift tax.
In the United States of America, county level tax assessors keep track of the assessed value of the property and the amount of taxes due and amount paid. These are public records.