Unless the grantor is also a grantee in the deed, or reserved a life estate, they have no right, title or interest in the property. Therefore, they have no right to enter the home. The property has a new owner.
The question is somewhat unclear - but - if you filed the suit prior to your retirment and the court accepted it, your claim of unequal pay should still be in effect.
This is not a question. If your question is, "What happens when the trustee moves the Court to declare a secured claim withdrawn," then one should object, particularly if the secured creditor still has a claim. If this is chapter 7, a secured creditor has no claim except on its collateral. In chapter 13, fight for your claim.
Yes, as long as you still owe money.
Only by the grantor assuming said person is still living.
Generally, yes. The grantor on a deed is the one who owns the property and is transferring it to the grantee. Once the deed has been executed and delivered to the grantee the grantee is the new owner and they must record the deed in the land records as proof of their ownership. The subsequent death of the grantor has no effect on the grantee's ownership.
You need to reword your question. Use names as examples.
You will need a Warranty or Quit claim deed. I strongly recommend that the deed be prepared by an attorney or escrow agent. The deed will list you as a grantor and the Trustee of the revocable as the grantee. You must sign the deed and follow through with any requirements to complete the transaction. If you fail to complete this procedure, you still own the property and the trust does not. This can be a disaster if the revocable trust is created by you as an estate plan. Please follow through.
You ask a question that no matter can answer (not with proof at any rate). Some would claim the true god is God. Others would claim that it is Allah. Others claim still that the there is no God. Others would claim that there are multiple Gods or that perhaps we are Gods. You are asking a question beyond human comprehension. There is no answer to your question, only mysteries. The only way you can 'answer' that question is on deciding on your beliefs and that will serve as your answer. Whether or not that is the true, I don't know. Nobody does.
no you have to make a claim for it to be regestered as a claim
No, a power of attorney (POA) cannot use the grantor's checks through the POA's own account. A POA is obligated to act in the best interest and welfare of the grantor, and using the grantor's checks for personal gain would be a breach of fiduciary duty. The POA should only use the grantor's assets for the grantor's benefit and within the bounds of the law.
you could have it used against you in court if the biological father of your daughter still wants custody. he can claim you are unstable and unless you stay in a stable relationship with the man in question. but if he can prove he is in a more stable relationship he can claim that he can care for her better.
I can't answer your question, but we may be in the same boat, unfortunately. Email me if you like, on RaciePSB@aol.com.au.