All liens stay on a CR for the required time(usually 7 years). So it cannot be removed unless the time has expired in which case you may need to render a letter of dispute asking it to be taken off the CR. The entry should be noted as "included in bankruptcy".
Yes, if it is not a perfected lien against real property and the debt was discharged in the bankruptcy.
If the bankruptcy is discharged you are no longer responsible for the debt.
Generally, judgements survive bankruptcy.
Yes if there was a lien on it. If your bankruptcy was discharged, it simply discharged the debt, not the collateral.
A bankruptcy is not discharged. Debts are discharged. Real estate taxes are a lien on the real estate and would not usually be discharged. Talk to your bankruptcy layer.
Tax liens will only be removed after they have been paid, been discharged through bankruptcy or the time to collect (statutes) have expired.
Not if the debt was officially discharged in the bankruptcy.
You have to, it is a debt...it is just a secured debt...by the lien on the property.
If the lien is a mortgage or a tax lien, the bankruptcy may not have discharged the debt, and the estate would have to be probated. The estate may be bankrupt, and there is usually a state procedure for estate bankruptcy. Federal bankruptcy does not apply. Consult a local attorney experienced in estates.
How can I get a lien removed from my credit report what is the statute of limitation law?
try here http://www.credit-repair-specialist.com/remove-tax-lien-from-credit-report.html
The question is NOT whether taxes are dischargeable in a bankruptcy. The question that has been asked is whether the IRS can still pursue you for taxes that were discharged in a bankruptcy (which would obviously confirm that some taxes are dischargeable in specific circumstances).If your taxes were discharged in a bankruptcy, the IRS cannot come after you for those taxes after the bankruptcy has been discharged. If they are doing so, they probably did not enter them as discharged correctly on their computer system.To correct this, you should call IRS collections and explain to them that the taxes should have been discharged in your bankruptcy. Ask them to send a referral to the IRS Insolvency Unit, and the Insolvency Unit will be able to pull the bankruptcy records and confirm what should have been discharged.Note that any liens that were filed before the bankruptcy will survive the discharge process. So, although the IRS debt has been discharged a lien may continue to exist. This lien only attaches to equity that was exempted in the bankruptcy process (so if you had $20,000 of equity in your home that you exempted under bankruptcy homestead exemption, the lien continues to attach to that equity). It does NOT attach to any equity that builds in your assets after the filing of your bankruptcy petition.