Either pay off the lien and then sell the vehicle, or sell the vehicle and use the money to pay off the lien.
No
You cannot sell a car you have a loan on if the lender has a lien on the vehicle. You will need permission from the lien holder to sell the car. If the lender has no lien on the vehicle then you can sell it if you wish. The title will list any lien holder.
you must have the signature of both signers
Cycle Country and Rocky Mountain ATV are a couple of places that you can purchase ATV snow plows. You can also look at other places that sell ATV's, they will often sell ATV snow plows as well.
The lain stays with the mortgage. And if the owner of the mortgage does not settle up with the lien holder that person cannot sell their house, car, boat or whatever the lien is on. They have to pay lien first or sell and before they get the money the amount of the lien will be deducted from total sell
If you sell the land it would still be subject to the lien. A prudent buyer will have the title researched and the lien will be disclosed. They will insist that the lien be paid off before taking title to the property.
In order to register an ATV in New Jersey you will need a certificate of origin. Also for tax purposes a notarized bill of sale from the person you bought it from if you got it second hand.. Beware of ATV's without titles or ones that have info under lien holder on the back of the Certificate or Origin. You can get a tittle for an ATV without papers but it is a long process and costs aprox.. $200 - $250 . There are conditions in which you cant get the title and that's if the ATV comes back with a lien on it .. then forget it.. If the original buyer stiffed the bank then you cant get a lien release letter and then you cant register it or get a title.. That's why ATV's without papers are much cheaper. you are rolling the dice.. good luck
No
Not without satisfying the lien or you can subordinate a tax lien in order to sell the house. Sometimes, the IRS will allow you to do this, if they believe it will help you to pay your tax liability.
You cannot sell a car with a lien against it without getting a lien release from the lender. To do otherwise is illegal.
The property is subject to a lien. The question isn't whether you can sell it. The problem is that the buyer won't buy the property as long as there's a lien on it. Your attorney will need to negotiate a partial release or a full release with the lienholder if you will pay off the lien, or half of the lien, out of the proceeds from the sale of the 20 acres. If you don't pay the lien in full and the lienholder agrees to a partial payment then the lien will still be an encumbrance on your remaining property.