Current location - Trademark Inquiry Complete Network - Overdue credit card - Can I sell a house on the blacklist?
Can I sell a house on the blacklist?
Blacklist (untrustworthy people) can sell houses.

The untrustworthy person does not affect the untrustworthy person to sell the house, but restricts the untrustworthy person to buy the house. Creditors may apply to the court to enforce the debtor's house and pay off debts. The debtor can inherit. Lao Lai's personal inheritance legally obtained can be inherited, but after inheriting Lao Lai's inheritance, the heirs have to repay the debts owed by Lao Lai.

According to the relevant regulations, if the heir fails to perform his legal obligations because of giving up the inheritance right, the act of giving up the inheritance right is invalid. The right of revocation shall be exercised within one year from the date when the creditor knows or should know the reasons for revocation. If it is not exercised within five years from the date when the debtor's behavior occurs, the right of revocation shall be extinguished. If the debtor's behavior affecting the realization of creditor's rights is revoked, it is not legally binding from the beginning.

Legal basis:

Article 3 of Several Provisions on Restricting the High Consumption and Related Consumption of the Executed Person

If the person subjected to execution is a natural person, after taking measures to restrict consumption, he shall not have the following high-consumption and non-essential consumption behaviors for life and work:

(a) when taking the means of transportation, choose the second class or above of the plane, train soft sleeper and ship;

(two) high consumption in hotels, hotels, nightclubs, golf courses and other places above the star level;

(three) the purchase of real estate or new construction, expansion, high-grade decoration of housing;

(four) leasing high-grade office buildings, hotels, apartments and other places to work;

(5) Purchasing non-essential vehicles;

(6) tourism and vacation;

(seven) children attending private schools with high fees;

(8) Paying high premiums to purchase insurance wealth management products;

(9) Non-essential consumption behaviors such as taking all seats of G-prefix EMU trains and first-class and above seats of other EMU trains.