Just like renters, if there is no lease or written agreement (Or noted in the will), there would be notice given and you would most likely have to move. If you have vested interest due to paying the mortgage, for instance, there might be additional rights. Depending on your relationship with the heirs, you might luck out.
Another PerspectiveIt is unlikely you have any rights if you inhabited the land with the permission of the owner. If you helped to pay a mortgage that would be likely be considered rent by any court and would not give you any ownership interest. You would need to bring a court action and a judge would decide the issue. It would be costly.
Generally, the ownership of the land would pass by will or the state laws of intestacy to the heirs at law. They can give you notice to vacate the property or you could make an offer to purchase the land from them.
Only the co owner's estate can do that. The estate has rights in the property and will want compensation.
Only if you strap a goat to the roof rack and call yourself Shirley.
Even though the joint owner is now the sole owner, it was still part of the deceased's estate when he died in debt. Creditors can apply for an Insolvency Administration Order to try to force a sale and take a cut of the proceeds, along with the joint owner.
When two individuals have a joint account together and one dies the other is the sole owner of the account. The survivor is not considered a 'beneficiary'. They have all the rights that any account holder would have in any account.
No. Not unless she is also listed as a co-owner on the certificate of title. However, she is still responsible for paying the loan if she co-signed the note. Partners who choose to remain unmarried have no rights to solely owned property when one partner dies.No. Not unless she is also listed as a co-owner on the certificate of title. However, she is still responsible for paying the loan if she co-signed the note. Partners who choose to remain unmarried have no rights to solely owned property when one partner dies.No. Not unless she is also listed as a co-owner on the certificate of title. However, she is still responsible for paying the loan if she co-signed the note. Partners who choose to remain unmarried have no rights to solely owned property when one partner dies.No. Not unless she is also listed as a co-owner on the certificate of title. However, she is still responsible for paying the loan if she co-signed the note. Partners who choose to remain unmarried have no rights to solely owned property when one partner dies.
The property owner.
Sora is owned by Square Enix, whose character designer was Tetsuya Nomura. Disney may own some rights on Sora, but Square Enix is his primary owner.
Yes. Any jointly owned assets do not form part of the deceaseds estate. The assets therefore belongs to the joint owner. This would be true even if the assets was a house.
Generally cat don’t eat their owner.
A home owner's association -- as a legal entity -- is a property owner with the same rights as other property owners in the locale. It can cut down trees on land owned by the condominium. It cannot cut down trees on a privately owned lot, which would be land owned by someone else, without the written consent of that landowner.
Burial sites are typicaly property just like anything else. The issue would be determeined by the laws of the State of residence of the original owner, either through their will, or the intestate law statute
A plantation owner was the person who owned the property and the slaves that worked on it.