This form is a contract for the lease of personal property. The lessor demises and leases to the lessee and the lessee takes and rents from the lessor certain personal property described in Exhibit "A".
This form is a contract for the lease of personal property. The lessor demises and leases to the lessee and the lessee takes and rents from the lessor certain personal property described in Exhibit "A".
If you want to review the legal description of a property you own or are interested in purchasing but don't have the deed on hand, you can search the public records. A copy of the deed and other real estate documents known as recording instruments are kept at the recorder's office where the property is located.
-Look at the property tax statement or online county property tax records for a legal description and a record of property constructed on the land. A web search for your county name and the term property tax should take you to a website where you can search by legal description or address.
A real estate lawyer is the ideal professional that should be sought when you need a legal description to be written. Without a proper description, you, as the seller, may find that your sale was void due to an improper land description.
Your best bet to finding the legal description is to locate the deed to the property in the public record. You can visit your county clerk of the court's website or office to find the deed. Most counties have this information online, and you can search by address, owner name, or parcel number.
Parcel boundary data, maps and ownership records are maintained at the county level, usually by the recorder's, assessor's or land surveyor's offices. Many Minnesota counties keep records in digital format and provide parcel information websites for use by the general public.
-Look at the property tax statement or online county property tax records for a legal description and a record of property constructed on the land. A web search for your county name and the term property tax should take you to a website where you can search by legal description or address.
You may come into the Recorder's Office and look at the official plat, order a copy online by entering the name of the plat instead of the document number, search for the property on LandShark GIS, search/download the plat using LandShark online searching, or contact the Public Works Department at 651-213-8700. 5.
To get a certificate of title number or find out if land is Torrens, call 612-348-5139 or email recordinginfo@hennepin.
With the "abstract system" an abstract is evidence of title. In the "Torrens system" the certificate of title is the title. In Minnesota the County Recorder is the Registrar of Titles. The Registrar is an arm of the District Court and under its control.