If you have made your payments on any mortgages or loans against this property and shared in the responsibility of paying taxes then you certainly have every right to be on that property. Co-Owner means just that .... you own part of it! I would seek out legal advice and have your lawyer deal with this. Unless you bring the law into this your problem won't be resolved.
The other owners must obtain a court order to take your interest in the property or to bar you from using it.
Co-owners of property each have the right to the use and possession of the whole property. If there is a problem that one co-owner is not paying their share that issue must be resolved between the parties or by a court order. The deadbeat still has the right to the use and possession of the property. If they cannot afford to pay their share they should sell their interest to the other co-owners taking into consideration the total amount of their arrears.
Your question lacks detail so the following is general information about names on deeds:
Generally, if your name is on the current deed then you own the property or an interest in the property. Having your name on a deed as grantee doesn't always mean you own the property. The deed must be the current deed and the grantor on that current deed must be the owner of the property. If you're named as a grantee on the current deed then you are indeed an owner and you have the right to the use and possession of the property.
Caveat: There are always millions of superseded deeds laying around in files, drawers, safes and bank deposit boxes. Finding a deed does not necessarily mean that the grantee is the present owner of the property. When a person conveys land they will still have their own acquisition deed in their possession, even fifty or seventy five years later. This is often a source of confusion for their heirs who may think dad still owned a forty acre parcel he sold forty years ago because they found the old deed.
Co owners of real property each have a right to the use and possession of the property. Their rights in the property can only be extinguished by a court order or by a voluntary conveyance of their interest.
Yes. As long as the property isn't subject to probate and as long as all the siblings execute the deed.
Yes. They should both be listed as grantees on the deed and the deed should be a survivorship deed. You should consult with an attorney who can draft a proper deed for your jurisdiction.Yes. They should both be listed as grantees on the deed and the deed should be a survivorship deed. You should consult with an attorney who can draft a proper deed for your jurisdiction.Yes. They should both be listed as grantees on the deed and the deed should be a survivorship deed. You should consult with an attorney who can draft a proper deed for your jurisdiction.Yes. They should both be listed as grantees on the deed and the deed should be a survivorship deed. You should consult with an attorney who can draft a proper deed for your jurisdiction.
There is no such document as a disinheritance deed. A deed cannot be revoked. When the owner of property executes a deed and the deed is recorded, the property has a new owner.There is no such document as a disinheritance deed. A deed cannot be revoked. When the owner of property executes a deed and the deed is recorded, the property has a new owner.There is no such document as a disinheritance deed. A deed cannot be revoked. When the owner of property executes a deed and the deed is recorded, the property has a new owner.There is no such document as a disinheritance deed. A deed cannot be revoked. When the owner of property executes a deed and the deed is recorded, the property has a new owner.
The names on the current deed determine who is listed as owner in the tax assessor's records. All the grantees on the deed are responsible for paying the property taxes.
You can't add property to your deed. If you acquire additional property then it must be transferred by the owner to you by another deed. If you own several parcels of land and want to have them all listed on one deed then you should seek the advice of an attorney who can review your situation and explain your options under the laws of your state. You may be able to consolidate the parcels into a single deed and that deed should be drafted by an attorney.
A person acquires an interest in real property by a deed, court order or inheritance.
This is an interesting question. A person cannot convey what they do not own. If there was only one property described in the deed and the grantor does not own that property then that deed is a nullity, in other words, legally void. It would be ignored in the chain of title for that property. If several properties were described in the deed and one was not owned by the grantor then only the "conveyance" of that one property would be null and void and the deed would be effective as to the other properties that were owned by the grantor.
A person who owns property with another by virtue of a survivorship deed cannot leave their interest in the property by their will. When they die the ownership passes automatically to the other joint owner with no need of probate. The deed controls.
Deeds don't have co-signers; loans have co-signers. Loan responsibility and property ownership rights are separate. If you are listed as a part-owner of a property it CAN NOT be sold without your signature on the transfer documents. If you are a co-signer on a mortgage loan but are not listed on the deed, you have no property rights unless you have rights under community property laws.
Both Deeds of Trust are listed in a title report. Ist Deed of Trust, fisrt position, second deed of trust, second position. Both liens will have to be paid off with a sale to clear the titl and they boths have to be shown prior to any sale, loan or refinance.
Ownership of personal property is conveyed by a deed. A bill of sale is merely a transaction written on paper. The person who has ownership is the person listed on a deed or title. In the absence of a title, such as in furniture, a bill of sale is proof of ownership. It just depends on the type of property, and whether the property is required by law to have a title.
When the property is sold at the foreclosure sale and the deed is made public record, the property is no longer yours and you must leave immediately. If you do not leave, the new owner can have you removed.