Indiana quiet-title actions ask the court to definitively resolve title disputes — establishing one party as the rightful owner against all other claimants.
Published May 7, 2026
## Quiet title actions in Indiana
A **quiet title action** is a lawsuit asking a court to declare who actually owns a piece of real property. The result is a court judgment that "quiets" all competing claims — establishing the plaintiff as the legitimate owner.
## When quiet title actions are needed
**1. Defective deed / chain of title:**
- Missing deed in the chain
- Improperly executed prior deeds
- Forged deeds in history
- Deeds from people without authority
**2. Boundary disputes:**
- Old fences / improvements crossing property lines
- Overlapping legal descriptions
- Survey disputes between neighbors
**3. Adverse possession:**
- After meeting the statutory possession period, formal court order needed to establish title
**4. Tax sales:**
- Cleaning up title after purchase at tax sale
- Removing prior-owner claims
**5. Foreclosure-related issues:**
- After foreclosure to clear residual liens / claims
- Resolving wrongful-foreclosure aftermath
**6. Estate / inheritance issues:**
- Family members disputing ownership after a death
- Multiple heirs with conflicting claims
- Property held informally for generations without proper transfer
**7. Mortgage / lien issues:**
- Old mortgages never released
- Mechanic's liens that should have been cleared
- Tax liens that have expired
- Judgment liens that don't apply
**8. Encroachment disputes:**
- Driveway / structures partly on neighbor's land
- Trees, buildings crossing lines
**9. Easement disputes:**
- Establishing or terminating easements
- Resolving disputes over easement scope
**10. Forged or fraudulent deeds:**
- Identity-theft real estate fraud
- Wild deeds with no chain to legitimate owner
## Common parties to a quiet title action
**Plaintiff:** the person claiming to be the rightful owner
**Defendants** include anyone with a potential claim:
- Prior owners (or their heirs)
- Neighbors
- Mortgage holders
- Lien holders
- Tax authorities
- The state itself
- Any unknown claimants (joined by name "all unknown persons claiming an interest")
## The procedure
1. **Title search and survey** — identify all potential claimants and the precise property
2. **Demand letter** to known claimants (in some states; not always required)
3. **Complaint filed** in court of proper jurisdiction (usually circuit / superior court where property is located)
4. **Service of process** on all known defendants
5. **Service by publication** for unknown claimants in many states
6. **Lis pendens** filed in land records — putting world on notice
7. **Discovery** — title abstracts, surveys, witnesses
8. **Hearing or trial** — court determines ownership
9. **Judgment** — declares ownership; orders title cleared
10. **Recording** of judgment in land records to clear chain
## What the plaintiff must prove
Generally:
- **Standing** — plaintiff has a real interest
- **Source of title** — chain leading to current claim
- **Defects in adverse claims** OR **superior right**
- **Adequate notice** to all interested parties
## Common defenses
- **Statute of limitations** — most claims have time limits
- **Adverse possession** — defendant's possession ripened into ownership
- **Equitable estoppel** — plaintiff acquiesced in defendant's claim
- **Defective service** — failure to give proper notice
- **Bona fide purchaser status** — defendant bought without knowledge of plaintiff's claim
- **Title superior to plaintiff's** — defendant has the better claim
## Service by publication
When parties' identities or addresses are unknown:
- Publish notice in newspaper of general circulation
- Typically 4-6 weeks of weekly publication
- Combined with court-issued affidavits regarding diligent search
- Allows judgment binding even unknown claimants
## Title insurance
**Title insurance** can sometimes resolve issues without litigation:
- Owner's policy covers many defects discovered post-purchase
- Insurer may pay to clear title or compensate the owner
- Insurer often hires attorneys for quiet-title actions
If you have title insurance and discover a problem, contact the insurer BEFORE filing your own lawsuit.
## Costs
Typical quiet-title costs:
- **Filing fee:** $200-$500
- **Title search / abstract:** $200-$1,000
- **Survey:** $500-$2,500
- **Service / publication:** $500-$2,000
- **Attorney fees:** $3,000-$15,000+ depending on complexity
Contested cases with multiple parties can run much higher.
## Time to resolution
- **Uncontested simple cases:** 3-6 months
- **Cases requiring publication:** 6-9 months
- **Contested cases:** 12-24+ months
## Heirs property — a particular crisis
**Heirs property** — land owned informally by extended family, often inherited generation-to-generation without formal estate proceedings — has been a major issue, especially in the South and rural communities. Quiet title is often the only way to:
- Sell the property
- Get a mortgage
- Develop the property
- Receive disaster aid (FEMA requires clear title)
- Pay property taxes properly
Many states have adopted the **Uniform Partition of Heirs Property Act** to provide protections for heirs in court-ordered sales.
## Alternatives to litigation
Sometimes title issues can be cleared without full quiet-title:
- **Curative deeds** — corrected deeds with all parties' signatures
- **Quitclaim deeds** — transferring whatever interest may exist
- **Affidavit of heirship** (in some states)
- **Statutory marketable title acts** — automatic clearing of old defects
- **Title insurance "endorsement"** of certain defects
- **Waiver / release** documents
Try these first when possible.
## What you should do
If you have title issues — known defects, missing deeds, boundary disputes, inherited property without clear title — talk to a Indiana real-estate attorney. Many Indiana attorneys specialize in quiet-title actions and offer flat-fee or fixed-cost packages for routine cases. Free legal-aid organizations sometimes help with heirs-property cases for low-income owners.
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*This guide is general information about Indiana law as of early 2026 and is not legal advice. Quiet-title procedures vary by state. Talk to a licensed Indiana real-estate attorney about your specific situation.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.