Fee Simple
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After a life estate has been extinguished the fee owners, sometimes called remainders, have the right to the use and possession of the property.After a life estate has been extinguished the fee owners, sometimes called remainders, have the right to the use and possession of the property.After a life estate has been extinguished the fee owners, sometimes called remainders, have the right to the use and possession of the property.After a life estate has been extinguished the fee owners, sometimes called remainders, have the right to the use and possession of the property.
The answer is no. Property owned with another person as joint tenants with the right of survivorship passes automatically to the co-owner when you die. You cannot bequeath your interest in that property in your will. It does not become part of your estate.
The Bill of Right ...
If they are the sole possessor, yes, they have the absolute right to choose who gets it next by explicitly stating so. However, if they do not define the heir to the estate (via a will or otherwise) then the estate is divided amongst all immediate family according to law.
Foreclosure is to shut out, to bar, to extinguish a mortgagor's right of redeeming a mortgaged estate. It is a termination of all rights of the homeowner covered by a mortgage. Foreclosure is a process in which the estate becomes the absolute property of the lending institution.
It was the "so called" Divine Right of the Monarchs.
individual freedom is a absolute right
individual freedom is a absolute right
The imidiate family has the right to their fathers estate.
The parent has retained a life estate in the property.
Dower is the surviving wife right to a portion of the husband's estate when he dies. It is currently called statutory share.