Yes as the house could still be claim to pay any debts you have.
The rights in the real property are a part of the estate. If the property was owned with rights of survivorship, the daughter may claim title without going through probate. Consult an attorney who does probate work in your jurisdiciton.
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.
It would be a part of the veteran's estate. The estate will go through probate.
Open an estate through the probate court. They can be appointed the executor. Consulting a probate attorney for your location is a good idea.
If she and her husband were both on the deed, it will be survivorship. If not, she will have a claim on the property.
If your parents have died and you have rights to property, the probate court should determine those rights. If the heirs can not agree to a settlement, it is up to the probate court to decree what will be done. The estate should go through probate so that anyone with any claims against the land can present them at that point and get it over with. That way no one 10 years down the road can claim an interest in the land.
The way the property is titled determines who takes ownership. If the property is titled as Joint Tenants or Joint Tenants With Right of Survivorship, the surviving person(s) named on the deed receive the entire property and it is not subject to probate distribution. If the property is titled as Tenants-In-Common, it is subject to probate distribution as required under the laws of the state in which the property is located.
Yes. That person can file a claim in probate court against the estate. Care givers often do.Yes. That person can file a claim in probate court against the estate. Care givers often do.Yes. That person can file a claim in probate court against the estate. Care givers often do.Yes. That person can file a claim in probate court against the estate. Care givers often do.
yes
Visit the probate court where she resided and inquire there.Visit the probate court where she resided and inquire there.Visit the probate court where she resided and inquire there.Visit the probate court where she resided and inquire there.
State laws vary, and your husband's children may be able to claim a portion of his estate unless he does some estate planning now. All your property and accounts should be held as joint tenants with the right of survivorship. If not, then your husband should have a will drafted by an attorney who specializes in probate and estate planning. If he does neither then his children may be able to claim a portion. You can check the laws of intestacy in your state at the related question link below.
You may proceed with your claim against the estate of the deceased, in probate court.