Each of the other three would sign a Quitclaim Deed assigning title to the fourth person--it will have to state the name of the new title owner (ie Joe Smith, a single man) and then go through a Title Company to record the new deed along with that. If the fourth person is refinancing the loan, then your lender will help manage the switch of names on the title at that time.
"DeedGrabbing" is the process of getting deeds to tax sale property from the owner right before the owner loses the property to taxes.
Annexation can involve both voluntary and involuntary processes. A voluntary process can be demonstrated through a request from a property owner and an involuntary process can be demonstrated through a city's choice to annex a property without the owner's consent.
did slaves change there names are did they keep the name that the slave owner gave them
In New York, if property is held jointly with right of survivorship between spouses and one spouse dies, the surviving spouse becomes the sole owner of the property. This means that the property automatically transfers to the surviving spouse outside of the probate process.
Probably doesn't. Makes no difference to the appraisal of the property process what the financial status of the property owner is.
The only way to change the name on a deed is for the owner of the property to execute a new deed transferring the property to new owners or to herself and another co-owner or through a straw and back to herself under her new name.
If you are living in a property owned by another business or person, no. You have to contact the property owner and have them change the locks (or provide you with the new locks so you can change them). If you are the property owner and there is a person renting you can only change the locks after you've notified the renter about the change in writing. If you have evicted the renter and they refuse to leave/turn in keys or there is no renter then you can change the locks at will.
The service offered by Conveyancing Online is transferring the legal title of a property, upon its sale or change of owner, from the original owner to the new owner, so they are the legal owners of the property.
The legal process by which a lender terminates the owner's right to a property that was pledged as security for a debt.
Yes. The lien can be recorded against any one property owner's interest.
No. One co owner of a property can only mortgage their own interest in the property. If they default, the lender can only foreclose on their interest and not on the interest of the other owner who did not consent to the mortgage.
No, paying property taxes on a property does not make you the property owner. Only a properly executed deed naming you as the owner would make you an owner.