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The answer to this depends on the state in which you live. Often times a broker will give a small percentage of commissions to an assistant for duties performed and that is fine. But in some states a license is required to received an money associated with a commission.
CORRECTION: Rush does not live at 1295 N. Ocean Blvd. That house is about as big as the guest bathroom at his estate up the road at 1495 N. Ocean Blvd.
Virtually every law firm in the local yellow pages will offer those services, and if you live in a big enough community, the yellow pages may even have a separate listing for ones that specialize in estate planning. There are also many online legal services that can help with this, like legalzoom or rocket lawyer.
It depends where you live. Every forestry company is owned by somebody overseas to someone.
Buckinghamshire Peter Jones lives in Fulmer, Buckinghamshire. Just off Black Park Lane- big estate he has 1 main house and about 4 smaller ones there. He also has a houses in Beaconsfield, on Burkes Road but he has sold that now.
You do not have to occupy the property. You can lease it to someone else if you wish.
Rights based on the life of an individual are typically referred to as a life estate. It means the individual has rights to use or live in a home for as long as they live. There is always someone that gets the 'remainder' of the items, the person who gets what is left after the holder of the life estate passes away. A life estate can cause problems if the holder or the remainderman wants to sell or lease the property.
Someone said she lives on The Webb Estate same as Francis Rossi, and she has been spotted in Tesco at Purley Cross.
They can live in the home if it is to the best interests of the estate. They need to pay the appropriate rent in the process.
Yes. It can be more difficult, because the court visits have to be in the state that is probating the estate, but it is often done.
they lose the house
The 3rd estate represented the bourgeoisie, meaning the commoners.
Live - Sunny Day Real Estate album - was created on 1999-10-19.
Only if it's your fortune. You can leave a will specifying how your estate should be divided. Depending on where you live, there may be some restrictions.... for example, you may not be able to exclude a spouse or child from your will, or you may have to explicitly do so (in some places, if someone who has a "natural right" to a share in your estate... such as a spouse or child... isn't mentioned at all, the state probate court will assume it's an oversight and grant them a share in the estate anyway).
Hi, i live in New Zealand and am a Property Valuation student (in some countries this is called a 'valuator' or 'appraiser'. Be warned that dependin on where u live these legal terms may have different definitions.some definitions for 'caveat' that i found on wikianswers:A warning or caution: "A final caveat: Most experts feel that clients get unsatisfactory results when they don't specify clearly what they want" (Savvy).A qualification or explanation.Law. A formal notice filed by an interested party with a court or officer, requesting the postponement of a proceeding until the filer is heard.a definition from Bayleys Real Estate (a large property realtor in NZ): 'a legal document which, when lodged with the Land Registry Office, gives the caveator the opportunity of protecting an existin right or of establishing an existin claim in property'. (property probably in the terms of property rights, not simply physical real estate). ...'the most common form: caveats against dealings in the land concerned. in effect, while the caveat is in place, it forbids any dealings in the land from being registered'my idea of what it is: maybe 'dealings in the land' relate to mortgaging, sellin, buyin or using it as collateral for a loan?i know this is an incomplete discussion but i anyway!cheersfrankie
coco
Legally, they cannot live in the house without the consent of the executor of the estate.