At our cemetery we would charge you $50.00 to transfer your cemetery property to your daughter. It is just a matter of filling out a transfer form... listing the location of the property and you signing the paperwork. She would then receive a deed in her name. That would give her full ownership and you would no longer have any interest or rights in that property.
We also have a "permission to use form." On that form you would just be giving her the right to use the cemetery space but you would still own it. There is no charge to do this.
If mother transferred her property to her daughter by deed, the deed was recorded and then her daughter died, the property would pass to the daughter's estate. It would then pass to the daughter's heirs according to her will or to the state laws of intestacy if she had no will.
A cemetery deed is a legal document. It is a deed for the plot or plots you purchased.
That may require a payment of taxes. The form of the life estate will also affect the tax situation.
According to your question, your mother and your daughter owned property together. That deed should be recorded in the land records. If they owned as joint tenants with the right of survivorship, when your mother dies her interest in the property would pass automatically to your daughter and bypass probate. If your mother signed a quitclaim deed that conveyed her interest to you, that deed must be recorded in the land records. By executing that deed, she broke the joint tenancy she had with your daughter and now you and your daughter own the property as tenants in common. Your mother no longer owns the property and it would not be included in her probate estate.
No
If the deed was recorded you must execute a new deed that conveys your interest in the property back to your mother. Then that deed must be recorded in the land records. If the deed was never recorded in the land records you could destroy it. If it was never recorded in the land records then the record title would still be in your mother's name.
mother and daughter has property simple fee no jtwrs mother dies can property be sold
Yes. The deed is the instrument by which title to real property is transferred to a new owner. The deed and the title are not separate.
Yes, in order for the property to be properly transferred, the executor has to execute the deed.
No. A deed is the instrument by which real property is transferred.
Yes. If they acquire land by a deed as joint tenants with the right of survivorship.
You cannot delete a person from a deed. They own an interest in the property and the only way to acquire their interest is if they transfer it to you by executing a deed. Your daughter must convey her interest to you by deed.