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It depends on what property one is trying to claim. If one is trying to claim a physical home property or money that belongs to him. These would be done differently. If one is trying to claim money, contact the appropriate state's department of treasury. Fill out an inquiry submittal form, if online, response should be immediate whether one has property to claim or not. Then one just has to wait about 1-2 weeks for a response.
No, once there is a quit claim, the one who signs off is no longer an owner and has no claim over that property.
One year is the time limit someone can claim property left behind on someone else's property in the state of California. After the one year time period is up, the item is up for grabs.
No because you own the property and you would be the that one that should be paying the property taxes.
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.
No. If the property was acquired as joint tenants with the right of survivorship and one dies, their interest passes automatically to the survivor by law. There is nothing for family members to claim.
A quit claim is a method of transferring property. It has nothing to do with the value of the estate.
One must purchase the property from the owner or meet the state requirements to perfect a claim of adverse possession.
That all depends on how the property was titled, when it was purchased, whether you live in a community or separate property state and state laws of intestacy and probate. You need to add more details.
A warranty deed guarantees that a property owner has the clear title to a property and the right to sell it. Quit Claim assigns and interest to the property. Check with your state laws, but in many states the QC is enough.
A bar claim action, sometimes referred to as an "action to quiet title", is an action to compel the determination of claim to real property. Different states have different statutes that govern bar claim actions. In New York State, Article 15 of the RPAL (Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law) govern a bar claim action. Generally, one would file a bar claim action to have marketable title to real property. One would typically have to file a bar claim action during the course of bankruptcy, obtaining title through adverse possession, or quieting title to a property acquired by quit claim deed. -Perrault Jean-Paul
No. No one lives forever. Some religions claim that some part of you may do so, however there is no proof of this.