Apparently the association owes a debt over which a lien has been filed.
Effectively, the lien can cloud the title of all the units/ homes in the association.
It is in the best interests of all the members and of the association's board to settle this matter quickly and file a release of the lien.
A judgment against the trustee in his individual capacity will not affect the trust property. A judgment against the trustee as the trustee will become a lien on the trust property.
This may vary by state. If the lien is placed against YOU, that being your wages, then it does not affect the property and it will have a clean title. If they file for a lien against your property, though, you will be required to pay off the lien before selling the property. I'd advise that you don't let the debt collector find out you have the property if you plan on selling it.
Yes, if you are a joint defendant or hold jointly owned property.
It depends on your state: If you live in most community property states (Louisiana West through Texas, and on the California) a judgment against her may affect your property if it is deemed to be "community property" which is property acquired during the marriage. If you live in a common law state, and the state has maintained "tenants by the entireities" as the form in which married persons hold property, then the property is, in all likelihood, free from the lien of the judgment.
It would not affect your credit at all because you are merely the tenant and are renting the property. Since you do not own it, and the owner is the person that has the lien filed against them, it will not affect you or your credit.
If the deed is unrecorded then you will remain the record owner and any liens or other encumbrances recorded against you will affect the property. The property will remain vulnerable to your creditors and the property taxes will be assessed against you. The world doesn't know the property has a new legal owner until the deed is recorded. If you die before the deed is recorded the deed may be deemed invalid in some jurisdictions. See related question link.If the deed is unrecorded then you will remain the record owner and any liens or other encumbrances recorded against you will affect the property. The property will remain vulnerable to your creditors and the property taxes will be assessed against you. The world doesn't know the property has a new legal owner until the deed is recorded. If you die before the deed is recorded the deed may be deemed invalid in some jurisdictions. See related question link.If the deed is unrecorded then you will remain the record owner and any liens or other encumbrances recorded against you will affect the property. The property will remain vulnerable to your creditors and the property taxes will be assessed against you. The world doesn't know the property has a new legal owner until the deed is recorded. If you die before the deed is recorded the deed may be deemed invalid in some jurisdictions. See related question link.If the deed is unrecorded then you will remain the record owner and any liens or other encumbrances recorded against you will affect the property. The property will remain vulnerable to your creditors and the property taxes will be assessed against you. The world doesn't know the property has a new legal owner until the deed is recorded. If you die before the deed is recorded the deed may be deemed invalid in some jurisdictions. See related question link.
No, only if the loans are secured against the property
If there were improvements made on the home or a loan taken out against the property, and they person/company goes through the proper steps, yes. The property being in trust does not affect that ability.
A lis pendens means that there is a lawsuit pending against the owners of the property, and that the outcome of that lawsuit may affect title to the property. Anyone who buys a property subject to a lis pendens risks losing all or part of the property, depending on the outcome of the lawsuit.
over 60,000 buildings were destroyed and people were left with no belongings
First the suit will not be filed against the insurance company but against you as the homeowner. Your insurance company will come in and protect you from the suit. This is covered under your liability section of the insurance policy. Your coverage includes legal fees in addition to the amount of coverage on your liability section.
If you register what exactly? If you mean would registering your vehicle with their address would it affect the homeowners premiums? NO