The person whose name is to be removed , must give a letter on a stamp paper and must sign it stating that his name should be removed and he has no claim to the property at all.
Title is the legal relationship between a person and their property. Having title to property means having ownership which stands against the right of anyone else to claim it. Title to real property is evidenced by a deed, inheritance from a probated estate or by a court order. The person who has title to property has the right to possess, control, and dispose of it. If that person dies while owning property, title will pass to her heirs by Will and/or according to the laws of intestacy.Title is the legal relationship between a person and their property. Having title to property means having ownership which stands against the right of anyone else to claim it. Title to real property is evidenced by a deed, inheritance from a probated estate or by a court order. The person who has title to property has the right to possess, control, and dispose of it. If that person dies while owning property, title will pass to her heirs by Will and/or according to the laws of intestacy.Title is the legal relationship between a person and their property. Having title to property means having ownership which stands against the right of anyone else to claim it. Title to real property is evidenced by a deed, inheritance from a probated estate or by a court order. The person who has title to property has the right to possess, control, and dispose of it. If that person dies while owning property, title will pass to her heirs by Will and/or according to the laws of intestacy.Title is the legal relationship between a person and their property. Having title to property means having ownership which stands against the right of anyone else to claim it. Title to real property is evidenced by a deed, inheritance from a probated estate or by a court order. The person who has title to property has the right to possess, control, and dispose of it. If that person dies while owning property, title will pass to her heirs by Will and/or according to the laws of intestacy.
Absolutely not. That person would be a volunteer, having paid the taxes on property they don't own. Paying the property taxes does not bestow legal title. You would need to obtain title from the heirs or from the town after the town takes possession of the property by tax title foreclosure.
The plaintiff must be the person(s) who has title to the property and can prove that their claim is the strongest as opposed to that of the adverse party.The plaintiff must be the person(s) who has title to the property and can prove that their claim is the strongest as opposed to that of the adverse party.The plaintiff must be the person(s) who has title to the property and can prove that their claim is the strongest as opposed to that of the adverse party.The plaintiff must be the person(s) who has title to the property and can prove that their claim is the strongest as opposed to that of the adverse party.
Ownership of real estate is evidenced and accomplished by a deed. The person who transfers the property is called the grantor and the person who receives it is the grantee. In any deed, the grantee is the new owner. The owner of real estate is said to hold title to it.
A landlord is a person, not a job. You are a landlord when you rent out your property. The job is property management and thus the job title is "property manager".
A real estate title rep is an agent for a title insurance company who deals with the law offices and title companies that sell title insurance policies. The person who examines the record title of a property is called a title examiner.
A clear title indicates that no other person or other entity has any claim on the property or interest in the property and you are the absolute owner.
Not exactly. The person with title to a property is the person who legally owns it. A deed and a title are not the same thing. A deed is a legal document that transfers the title from one person to another.
A clear title indicates that no other person or other entity has any claim on the property or interest in the property and you are the absolute owner.
no the lien has to be removed first then you can add another person to the title.sorry.
I believe that a lien on a property stays with the property, not with a person. The purchaser of the property will be responsible for any liens to get a clear title.
The grantee on the deed is the owner of the property. The grantee(s) on the deed is the person who holds title to the property. If the person who provided the cash to purchase the property wants an interest in the property they must be named as a grantee on the deed or they must have the owner execute a mortgage naming them as the mortgagee that will be recorded in the land records.