That depends on the terms of the original grant. If the right to revoke the easement was reserved by the owner then the easement can be revoked. The language used in grants of easements is legally significant. You need to have the original grant reviewed by an attorney who specializes in real estate law in order to determine what your rights are.
aquire property
NO
If a person on social security disability inherited a property and then "deeded" it to a person who is underage there is one property. Why do you think there are two?
That would mean a property owner who acquired their interest in the property by virtue of a deed.
A deeded piece of land is a property that has been signed over to you. It could either have been paid for or given to you as a gift.
If they deeded the property to anyone during their lifetime it belongs to that person & won't be included in the probate, unless the property was part of a family trust, or some other arrangement.
"Deeded lake rights" is a non-technical reference to some type of easement rights relating to a lake. It most commonly means a property that doesn't abut the lake has the right to use a beach or other access to the lake. Generally the easement runs with the land and will transfer to subsequent owners along with any transfer of the property.
No, deeded is not a word whoever asked this question because deeded is already pural. Of course "deeded" is a word. The asker is referring to the verb "deed", not the noun "deed" hence its pluraliity has no bearing as a verb cannot be plural. "The grandfather deeded his house to his grandson."
It depends on how the property is deeded.
Look for wording on the deed to fully understand what kind of access you will have--could be a walk way, a dock or a driveway. For access to be worthwhile, you need wording stating that access is permanent and can't be revoked. Ask the current owner what he has and verify with your title company that the wording is on the deed.
That means the land has appurtenant rights to access the beach which should also include the use of a beach. Those rights generally run with the land meaning that when the property is transferred to a new owner those beach rights pass to the new owner also.
No, the mortgage is a debt of the estate. That mortgage must be resolved before the property can be transferred.