If you conveyed your property to you and your son thn he has a half interest in the property. To get the property back into your name alone he would need to sign a quitclaim deed that conveys his interest to you.
You can't get someone's name off a deed. He needs to execute a deed voluntarily that transfers his interest in the property to you. You will likely need to buy him out.You can't get someone's name off a deed. He needs to execute a deed voluntarily that transfers his interest in the property to you. You will likely need to buy him out.You can't get someone's name off a deed. He needs to execute a deed voluntarily that transfers his interest in the property to you. You will likely need to buy him out.You can't get someone's name off a deed. He needs to execute a deed voluntarily that transfers his interest in the property to you. You will likely need to buy him out.
Your friend would have to convey her interest in the property to you by signing a quitclaim deed. You cannot "take them off" the present deed. Once your friend has conveyed her interest to you by her deed then you will be the sole owner of the property.
You would have to refi to get your name off of the mortgage.
You cannot take your husband's name off the mortgage. You must refinance in your own name and pay off the prior mortgage. You should have a deed drafted by an attorney.
If you are speaking of a deed of real estate property to a business, you would either have to (1) deed the property from the business to someone else, or (2) file a correction deed relating back to the original transaction.
You cannot just take someone's name off a deed. The person owns the property and they must transfer their interest voluntarily by executing a new deed that transfers their interest to a new owner. The only other way to "get someone's name off a deed" is by a court order.
If a husband and wife buy a house together and the wife's name is not put on the deed until the second mortgage, yes, the deed is still shared after the second mortgage is paid off.
The only way to remove a lien is to pay it off and get a release.
violet
The only way to get an owner "off" a deed is for the person to convey their interest in the property to you by executing a deed voluntarily.
It depends on why your name isn't on the deed. If it was a mistake, you need a lawyer to figure out the best way to get your name put onto a corrective deed. If your name is not on the deed because you obtained the property as a matter of law, then you may need to file a new deed to show you are the rightful owner, along with the papers that made you the rightful owner. Be sure to ask the lender what they were thinking when they accepted your promissory note and mortgage for a house that is not deeded to you.
Your wife must convey her interest to you by her signed deed.