Just a letter won't get it done. Have the person who is trying to take possesion of the property have the title company send you a "Quit Claim" form to fill out, sign and have notorized.
To give up property rights from a deceased wife, an attorney should be consulted, especially if the separation was not legal. The complications of claims to her estate should be clarified before any statements are put in writing.
Letters of administration of probate are issued by the court. If a will is left by the deceased, the property is distributed according to the will. If there is no will, the property goes into probate and the courts decide.
Generally, yes.
A letter of distribution of estate assets will likely be a document held by an attorney of a deceased individual. They will have specifically stated who gets their property and valuables in the event of their death.
You don't do a letter, but there is a form you get and have it notarized.
Depends on the original deed and wording. If the property was held 'with rights of survivorship' for a husband and wife, if the husband died the wife should be be able to sell it with a valid death certificate of the husband. If it was owned only by the deceased or as one of several owners, a Letter of Authority from the probate court is necessary to sell property.
deceased
this is a letter from a reputable appraiser giving their opion or apparsial of a specific property........good idea to have a couple of these on unique properties, such as show cars, antiques, jewelery etc......also good to have them insured for a 'state amount'..........
The executrix is required to execute the will as written to the best possible extent. Any deviation has to be approved by the court.
It could be the associative property.
vmrs
That is their responsibility in all states. They represent the estate in the sale of the estate's property. They will need a letter of authority to do so.