A division of the property must be done by all three owners. If there are three joint owners each one owns a one-third undivided interest in the WHOLE property. It can only be partitioned by a court.
33 divided by 1 is a division problem: it is not a property.33 divided by 1 is a division problem: it is not a property.33 divided by 1 is a division problem: it is not a property.33 divided by 1 is a division problem: it is not a property.
The right to survivorship of the house takes precedence and it never gets into the estate.
There is an identity property of division it is one. Any number divided by one remains the same.
Anything divided by 1 is itself.
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Yes. If you owned the property with your mother as joint tenants with the right of survivorship then sole ownership passed to you when she died. She could not dispose of her interest by will. IF the property is mentioned in her will the gift would be null and void because the property was not part of her estate.
The identity property of division simply states that any number divided by one is equal to the original number. Mathematically: x/1 = x
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Commutative property in division Indeed I have the answer. One example would be: 8 divided by 4 = 2 is different from 4 divided by 8 = 0.5 This means that if you alter the order of the dividends, the result of the operation will change. That is why division is not a commutative property. not ha ha ha
Zero divided by any number is always zero and a number cannot be divided by zero.
The advantage would be for the spouse if you reside in a community property state where survivorship goes to the spouse should a death occur and property is divided 50/50% in cases of divorce.
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