i gess so
In, To Kill a Mocking Bird, Dill ran away because he felt unneeded and unwanted. He felt his stepfather was taking his place and that his mother preferred his new stepfather to him.
Certainly. He has a legitimate interest in the welfare of his mother.
Signing a mortgage does not give you an interest in the real estate. An interest in real estate is acquired by deed. Hopefully you are also on the deed to the property as the joint owner with the right of survivorship. That would make you the sole owner of the property upon your mother's death. However, if you are not on the deed and you signed the mortgage then your mother's death would make you solely responsible to the lender for paying the mortgage and you would need to probate her estate so that title to the real estate would pass to her heirs. If there are other siblings they would inherit an equal interest in the property and perhaps you could make a claim against the estate for your mother's half of the mortgage balance. You should speak with an attorney.
Her life was not as wonderful as a life should be. She lived with her mother and stepfather She was sent away to a school for16 years of age. She studied to be a nurse.
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Julia and Helen Stoner's mother passed away under mysterious circumstances. Dr. Grimesby Roylott, their stepfather, was suspected of being involved in her death, but there was not enough evidence to prove it.
No, once the mortgage company begins the foreclosure process they will find out that your mother is dead. This will not stop the foreclosure process. The only way to avoid that is to make the payments.
The estate of the father is responsible for their share of the house. The home will probly have to be sold to pay debts and pay off the mortgage. It may also depend on how the property was deeded, she may inherit the home free and clear (along with the mortgage) on his death.
Both parents are living and I know he helps his mother financially but am not sure about his father.
That depends on several factors. First if there is a will and it gives everything your mother owns (which is quite common) to your stepfather then there is nothing you can do, because he now owns them. If there is no will, the laws of the state probably provide that if a decedent leaves a spouse and children of a predeceased spouse, then all of them have a proportionate share of the estate. In that case both you and your stepfather own each heirloom in whatever proportion the statute specifies. You would have to buy back the heirloom paying him for his pro-rata interest in the value of the items. Unfortunately, this is an all too common situation, which results in things like a mother's diamond ring going to the stepfather who then has the right to sell it or give it away to his own children, if he has any, in his own will.
yes
Isaac Newton's father died 2 months before he was born and his mother remarried and moved away when he was 3, leaving him in the care of his grandmother. Later on his stepfather died and his mother returned- pulling Newton out of school to work on the family farm.