Unpaid Property Taxes Found One Year After Land Contract Signed
Added November 5, 2009 by Ilyce R. Glink
Summary: Unpaid Property Taxes Found One Year After Land Contract Signed
Land contract -- also known as installment contracts for deed -- are complicated documents. If you are not careful, you could end up in a mess. Some issues that can lead to problems in a land contract are title issues, including unpaid real estate and property taxes. But unpaid taxes could be the lesser of some of the title problems you can encounter using a land contract. This reader found unpaid property taxes from years earlier about a year after entering into the land contract.
Unpaid Property Taxes Found One Year After Land Contract Signed
Q: We purchased our property in 2008 with a land contract. The contract states that the property that is sold to us be “unencumbered.”
Now we’ve discovered that there is a lien for unpaid county property taxes from 2001. The title search did not find the lien. We’d like to know who is responsible for paying the tax bill. And, is the contract void since the property is not unencumbered?
A: When you buy a property under a land contract, you are buying the home over time. You make your payments and when you have completed making all of the payments, the seller transfers legal title to the home to you.
If you worked with a real estate attorney to help you through the land contract purchase process, the attorney would have recommended that purchase (or receive from the seller) a title insurance policy for a contract purchase of a home.
If you bought an owner’s title insurance policy, then the title insurance company would pay the tax and make you whole in this situation because the title company didn’t find that the taxes were unpaid. If you didn't buy an owner’s policy, you would likely owe the tax but could sue the seller for failure to give you unencumbered title.
In any event, it’s unlikely that the land contract to purchase the property would be void, but rather that the seller breached his or her obligation to give you unencumbered title to the property. If you are still making payments to the seller under the land contract, you may be entitled to deduct from those payments an amount necessary to pay the amount owed for taxes.
Please talk to a real estate attorney for further details.
You may want to read more on Title Company Problems, Land Contracts and Unpaid Property Taxes:
Causes Of Title Company Problems
Land Contract A Bad Idea
Unpaid Real Estate Property Taxes: Redeeming The Tax Sale
Unpaid Real Estate Taxes
See more articles on this topic by clicking on the "RELATED ARTICLES" above and to the right.
We have over 5000 articles on Real Estate Advice, Personal Finance Advice and Consumer Advice on our site. We encourage you to look at these articles. As always, if you have a comment on our articles, don't forget to post your comment below. We thank you for coming to ThinkGlink.com.
© Ilyce R. Glink. All rights reserved. This content may not be used, distributed, syndicated, compiled or excerpted in any medium or form without written authorization from Think Glink, Inc. For information on syndicating ThinkGlink.com please contact us.
Additional Topics
(View All Topics)consumer advice credit estate planning home buying ilyce glink mortgage mortgage lenders mortgage loan personal finance advice real estate real estate advice real estate agent refinance mortgage selling taxes









Comments
No comments have been posted.