You havent provided enough detail. It depends on when he transferred his interest in the property and whether you owned the property jointly before he transferred his interest to you. He may be able to claim a portion of the taxes, the portion he paid if he was the sole owner before his transfer. However, you should consult with your tax accountant.
You havent provided enough detail. It depends on when he transferred his interest in the property and whether you owned the property jointly before he transferred his interest to you. He may be able to claim a portion of the taxes, the portion he paid if he was the sole owner before his transfer. However, you should consult with your tax accountant.
You havent provided enough detail. It depends on when he transferred his interest in the property and whether you owned the property jointly before he transferred his interest to you. He may be able to claim a portion of the taxes, the portion he paid if he was the sole owner before his transfer. However, you should consult with your tax accountant.
You havent provided enough detail. It depends on when he transferred his interest in the property and whether you owned the property jointly before he transferred his interest to you. He may be able to claim a portion of the taxes, the portion he paid if he was the sole owner before his transfer. However, you should consult with your tax accountant.
You may need to do it through a "straw". In that case you would both convey to a third person at your lawyer's office then the third person would convey it to you. Then both deeds would be recorded together in the right order. In Massachusetts, the husband could convey to his wife directly. Check your state laws.
You havent provided enough detail. It depends on when he transferred his interest in the property and whether you owned the property jointly before he transferred his interest to you. He may be able to claim a portion of the taxes, the portion he paid if he was the sole owner before his transfer. However, you should consult with your tax accountant.
You may create a problem if you break a tenancy by the entirety- check with a lawyer first.
quit claim deed
Fill out a Quit Claim Deed - have it notarized!!
your husband can file a quit claim deed for 50% of the property to you.
Yes. The husband would be the sole owner of the property and could leave it to his wife in his will.
She will have to "quit-claim", come off the title of the home. An attorney will do this for you. But as soon as you refinance, she can be placed back on the title.
You could file a quit claim deed. It will not remove your obligations under the mortgage and since the quit claim means they get the same rights you have, it doesn't to any good, except if there is any equity in the property after the sale, they will get it, not you.
No, not if the quit claim was a legal transfer under the BK laws. If it was not an allowable transfer the BK trustee/court may dismiss the quit claim and the property may be subject to BK action.
I wish you hadn't already signed.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, A quit claim, takes away your rights to the property, but, not your responsibility.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ONLY sign at closing when the property is SOLD!
No he cannot claim equity on the house. But the daughter can claim it according to laws in India. Some laws are really ridiculous.
Yes. He is the sole owner of the real estate and the sole owner of the debt.
Yes. You effectively "quit" your claim of ownership.
Just sign the quit claim deed and have recorded downtown.