If he left the house to you in a will I don't think your mom can give it to your brother, but the will will need to have gone through probate to make the house yours. Technically your mother may own the house too if she is also on the deed and that would give her the right to deed it to anyone she wants. I would call a lawyer.
Could depend on where you live. It seems that here in Texas you can, indeed, buy a house by paying off the back taxes. However, there is a lengthy preliminary legal process which must be followed. rdg
The head of the household is the person who earns the most and is responsible for paying the bills and making the decisions in the house. Traditionally, it is the oldest male in the house, but nowadays, it can easily be a woman.
I am very sorry to hear about you losing one of your parents. I lost my mother just over a year ago. Usually there is a Will and it's between husband and wife (in this case mother/father.) Generally everything goes to the spouse with the exception of possibly jewelry, china, etc., that your mother may have left to you or your siblings and that your father should give you if this is the case. Your father would be responsible for paying income tax. If your parents were divorced or your mother was a widow, then she too should have a Will. Before siblings can have any properties such as a house, land, condo, owned apartment, the estate has to go through the Probate. Probate makes sure that all creditors are paid off, all personal, house and land taxes are paid in full. What is left after this is divided according to your mother's wishes or if there is no will, according the the laws of your state. It is best to consult a probate attorney that deals with such things. If your mother has a lawyer and you know who it is, then please contact him/her and they will assist you in taking care of the estate for you.
Absolutely.....your obligation is to pay the rent...what he does or doesn't do....or when he does it, is absolutely of no concern to you. And your failure to pay rent does not change anything with his not paying the tax collector. That could be the reason he is having trouble! Paying rent is your obligation. Most landlords ding your credit (I would) after being five days late. I start eviction on day ten. If you are late twice, no chance of staying.
Taxes levied on a homeowner for their property to secure the payment of taxes. A tax lien may be imposed for delinquent taxes owed on property, or as a result of someone not paying their taxes. They are important, because you want to keep your house and property, and not get it seized. Tax liens are issued when the IRS decides to claim your assets as their own in lieu of you paying your income taxes. Tax liens can take your real property, empty your bank accounts, and seize your paychecks.
If your mother died and he became the sole owner then yes, he can leave it to his brother in his will.
The designation Tenants-In-Common (or Tenancy-in-Common) on a title or deed indicates the legal owners of the property. Tenants-in-common also means that on the death of your mother, the estate will own half of the house and your brother the other half. He will either have to buy the other half, or the house will be sold and any profits split between the estate and your brother. If your brother is living with your mother, or paying mortgage/taxes/maintenance/down payment, this is common to protect his investment in the property.
Dear mother, brother's dead!
Try making him 2 paying rent high price
Yes
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the vikings shared their house with the Aunts, Uncles, cousins,mother, father,grandma and grandpa.
If your grandmother's will states that the property is to be shared equally by mother and her brothers then they share equally. His living there gives him no greater right to the property unless your grandmother is still living and changes her will.
Get legal advice. Unfortunately, it sounds like your mother did not give you rights to continue to live there in her will, and did not transfer ownership to you alone. Your siblings probably have rights to sell the house and cause you to move out. If you have been paying the mortgage from your account, you may have also have additional funds coming to you. Alternatively, you could refinance and pay them off.
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If your brother is executor of the estate, yes.
My dad made a house in their land in india.But that land was from my grand dad.He made a will which is after my dad need to give my brother.But for that house my brother paying tax in his name. My brother got another house. When my parents build a new house my brother and his family came to my parents house.Now my sister in law was harrased my parents.So my brother went back to their own house. But my sister in law not willing to go back their house.So my parents locked the house and they went to Delhi.Now my sister in law made injection order .I am asking do my parents loose their house.