Sentences with phrase «grantor claim»

The credit grantor claim to the insurance company then, sell your account to a collection agency and save money on taxes, this account has been already satisfied and you now have two items on your credit report for the same account.

Not exact matches

Other provinces handle the matter differently, but in Ontario you can claim 3 % of the monies received and disbursed by the grantor, and a management fee of 3 / 5ths of 1 % of the average annual value of the grantor's assets.
A deed in which the grantor conveys title to the grantee and agrees to protect the grantee against title defects or claims asserted by the grantor and those persons whose right to assert a claim against the title arose during the period the grantor held title to the property.
A deed which conveys not only all the grantor's interests in and title to the property to the grantee, but also warrants that if the title is defective or has a «cloud» on it (such as mortgage claims, tax liens, title claims, judgments, or mechanic's liens against it) the grantee may hold the grantor liable.
Spouses and grantor trusts filing jointly can claim a 5 percent tax credit on contributions up to $ 3,840, for a maximum of $ 192 per qualified beneficiary.
She received a 1099C from the HELOC grantor and is now telling me that I need to claim 60 % of it and she 40 % because our asset split was 60/40.
The donor may claim a charitable income tax deduction for funding a grantor lead trust or a charitable gift tax deduction for funding a non-grantor lead trust.
For example, there is the possibility that in any case a part of an original site has ceased to be used for the purposes prescribed under the original deed, so as to give rise to a reverter at that stage, with the result that any claims by or on behalf of the grantor's successors could be out of time.
Quitclaim deeds are also used simply to confirm that the grantor does not claim any interest in the described property.
By using a this deed, the grantor promises the transferee (1) that he or she is the owner of the property and has the right to convey it, (2) that no one else is possessing the property, (3) that there are no encumbrances against the property, (4) that no one with a better claim to the property will interfere with the transferee's rights, and (5) to defend certain claims regarding title to the property.
This means that the grantor does not guarantee that there are no claims on the property to the grantee.
This means that the grantor does not guarantee that there are no other claims to the property in existence.
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