You cannot claim adverse possession on property you had permission to use. Forget it.
Yes, if there are no living heirs then the property may be claimed through adverse possession after all requirements have been fulfilled and the statute of limitations has passed for the state where the property is located.
You cannot make a claim of adverse possession on any government owned land. It is exempt from such claims.
Generally, an adverse possession suit is filed in a court of equity.
It would if you met all your state's requirements for making a claim under adverse possession.
The Adverse Possession in Texas is also known as the Squatter's Right. The process of adverse possession in Texas must start with a claim. Thereafter a due judicial procedure will be followed.
First- you cannot claim adverse possession against someone who doesn't own the property. You don't have an adverse possession against your landlord who doesn't own the property but has an adverse possession claim against the owner of the land. According to the minimal facts you provided you don't have any standing to make such a claim. You are using the property with the landlord's permission. One of the elements required to make a claim of adverse possession is that you use the property openly and notoriously (without permission).
Claim of title is a term that is related to adverse possession. An adverse possessor of property may acquire title from another by openly occupying their land and paying real property tax for at least seven years. The adverse possessor must file their claim under certain legal theories. Under claim of title, they get only what they actually possessed. If adverse possession is claimed under color of title, a person may have only cleared two acres of the entire five acres, but they will get the full five acres.Adverse possession is a complicated area of law in Florida and claimants are given certain rights. See related link.Claim of title is a term that is related to adverse possession. An adverse possessor of property may acquire title from another by openly occupying their land and paying real property tax for at least seven years. The adverse possessor must file their claim under certain legal theories. Under claim of title, they get only what they actually possessed. If adverse possession is claimed under color of title, a person may have only cleared two acres of the entire five acres, but they will get the full five acres.Adverse possession is a complicated area of law in Florida and claimants are given certain rights. See related link.Claim of title is a term that is related to adverse possession. An adverse possessor of property may acquire title from another by openly occupying their land and paying real property tax for at least seven years. The adverse possessor must file their claim under certain legal theories. Under claim of title, they get only what they actually possessed. If adverse possession is claimed under color of title, a person may have only cleared two acres of the entire five acres, but they will get the full five acres.Adverse possession is a complicated area of law in Florida and claimants are given certain rights. See related link.Claim of title is a term that is related to adverse possession. An adverse possessor of property may acquire title from another by openly occupying their land and paying real property tax for at least seven years. The adverse possessor must file their claim under certain legal theories. Under claim of title, they get only what they actually possessed. If adverse possession is claimed under color of title, a person may have only cleared two acres of the entire five acres, but they will get the full five acres.Adverse possession is a complicated area of law in Florida and claimants are given certain rights. See related link.
According to the information at the link provided below there are three ways to claim adverse possession. If the claim is based on a recorded written document and the claimant has paid property taxes on the property, the claimant must have maintained possession for seven years. If the claim is based on an inaccurate written document but the claimant did not pay taxes, the time period for maintaining possession is 10 years. If no documents are involved and the adverse possessor has not paid property taxes on the property, then the time period for maintaining possession is 20 years (Sec. 893.25-893.32). Title by adverse possession must be established by a court decree.
In Nebraska, the duration of such possession is ten (10) years. Nebraska Code §25-202. One who claims title by adverse possession must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that he or she has been in actual, continuous, exclusive, notorious, and adverse possession under a claim of ownership for the full 10-year period mandated by this section. A claim in the nature of a life estate is not a "claim of ownership" within the meaning of the adverse possession doctrine. Lewis v. Poduska, 240 Neb. 312, 481 N.W.2d 898 (1992).
The child was living in the house with permission. Permissive use is a bar to any claim of adverse possession. I assume the property is owned by a second child.
No. Adverse possession must be exclusive for the statutory period of time. Since a common element is used by multiple people, unless you can prove you were the only one who used the common area during the statutory period, you have no claim of adverse possession.