India
At the first instance of knowledge of change in title of the property, the original owner has to file / lodge a criminal complaint against the person, who has done the wrong & mischief. Secondly, to negative the wrong doing, the original owner has to initiate a civil litigation praying for declaration of the 'title' as void, as this was done without his consent & knowledge, behind his back. For that purpose, the owner has the onus to prove, prima facie his bonafides of circumstances upon which the documents of title of property was passed on to the man, who allegedly changed the title.
US, Canada & UK
In the Unites States, and any other recorded land system, you cannot sell what you do not own. As long as you recorded your deed when you purchased the property then no one else can sell your land. Their deed would have no effect. It would be null and void.
If you recorded your deed in the land records and have never transferred your property to anyone else then no one else can sell your land. A person cannot sell what they do not own. Further, property is not sold by selling the paper deed. The buyer would inspect the property.
The deed must be notarized in most jurisdictions and the "seller" would be required to provide identification such as a driver's license. If someone tried to sell your property they must impersonate you and forge your name to the deed of conveyance. They would be committing criminal offenses. It would be an elaborate deception and as soon as the "new owner" tried to move in they would find you there and realize they had been duped.
A purchaser of real estate generally has an attorney represent them in the sale. Ownership of real estate is not determined by the actual paper deed. It is determined by recorded documents at the land records office. The buyer's attorney arranges to have the record title to the property examined at the land records office.
Each time a property is transferred a new deed is recorded in the land records. The new deed is copied or scanned into the records and the original from that transaction is returned to the owner. Keep in mind that many prior deeds are in existence but the grantee on the most recently recorded deed is the record owner.
The personal property inside the house belongs to the resident.
A quit claim deed gives whoever is on it the same rights to the property as the original holder had. If you create a quit claim deed for property you hold title to and put your own name on it along with someone else, you are essentially splitting the property in half.
Yes. They will become an owner until they convey their interest to someone else by deed.
That depends on whose name was on the deed when the mortgage was executed.
If you are speaking of a deed of real estate property to a business, you would either have to (1) deed the property from the business to someone else, or (2) file a correction deed relating back to the original transaction.
A deed has little to do with the house. Deeds transfer the ownership of real property, or, the land. If there is a dwelling attached to the real estate then it is considered part of the real estate. You should already have a deed for the land on which you built your house. Otherwise you built your house on someone else's land and now they own it. You need to get a deed from the owner of the property.You should contact an attorney who can review your situation and explain your options.A deed has little to do with the house. Deeds transfer the ownership of real property, or, the land. If there is a dwelling attached to the real estate then it is considered part of the real estate. You should already have a deed for the land on which you built your house. Otherwise you built your house on someone else's land and now they own it. You need to get a deed from the owner of the property.You should contact an attorney who can review your situation and explain your options.A deed has little to do with the house. Deeds transfer the ownership of real property, or, the land. If there is a dwelling attached to the real estate then it is considered part of the real estate. You should already have a deed for the land on which you built your house. Otherwise you built your house on someone else's land and now they own it. You need to get a deed from the owner of the property.You should contact an attorney who can review your situation and explain your options.A deed has little to do with the house. Deeds transfer the ownership of real property, or, the land. If there is a dwelling attached to the real estate then it is considered part of the real estate. You should already have a deed for the land on which you built your house. Otherwise you built your house on someone else's land and now they own it. You need to get a deed from the owner of the property.You should contact an attorney who can review your situation and explain your options.
I'm not an attorney. A warranty deed can go back to the original owner. Why not? The original owner can acquire the property again; there is no law against that. The deed might still be a warranty deed, but if the deed has become clouded in some way while under other ownership, the original owner might possibly not receive a warranty deed when he gets the property back.
You can't get someone's name off a deed. He needs to execute a deed voluntarily that transfers his interest in the property to you. You will likely need to buy him out.You can't get someone's name off a deed. He needs to execute a deed voluntarily that transfers his interest in the property to you. You will likely need to buy him out.You can't get someone's name off a deed. He needs to execute a deed voluntarily that transfers his interest in the property to you. You will likely need to buy him out.You can't get someone's name off a deed. He needs to execute a deed voluntarily that transfers his interest in the property to you. You will likely need to buy him out.
If you want to get your original deed of trust note, it will need to be obtained from the trustee. A deed of trust is a document that secures a loan with real property.
To force someone off a deed, you have to take the person to court and file a civil judgment. A judge can remove someone from the deed.
Obtain a copy from the office where land records are filed. If the deed was recorded you don't need the original. If you didn't record the deed then you have a big problem. If the record title is still in your deceased parents' names then you will need to file a probate petition to acquire legal title.
You don't change the name on the original deed. You now have a deed from the other grantee in your original deed. Therefore, you have acquired your title to the property in two deeds.