That would mean a property owner who acquired their interest in the property by virtue of a deed.
The owner of a deeded home can get the home back if the home is in his or her name. The taxes must be paid on a deeded home in order for it be a clear deed.
Deeded land has a legal owner of the land, with a deed to prove ownership. Recorded land is on record at the land office, but it is not necessarily deeded to anyone.
look up joint tenants and tenants in common.Depends on how it was deeded
the state
That depends on the terms of the original grant. If the right to revoke the easement was reserved by the owner then the easement can be revoked. The language used in grants of easements is legally significant. You need to have the original grant reviewed by an attorney who specializes in real estate law in order to determine what your rights are.
No, deeded is not a word whoever asked this question because deeded is already pural. Of course "deeded" is a word. The asker is referring to the verb "deed", not the noun "deed" hence its pluraliity has no bearing as a verb cannot be plural. "The grandfather deeded his house to his grandson."
Deeded land is land transferred by means of a deed.
You need to request that the Forest and Trail Commission convey the parcel to you.
What if there was a will and the house was deeded to the wife what about the contents of the house?
It reverts back to the heirs of the original owner.
Unless other arrangements are made, the creator of the copyright, first user of the trademark, or inventor of the patent is the first owner. Intellectual property can be transferred like real property (deeded, sold, etc.), but is more frequently licensed.
A deeded parking spot (or space) is a piece of private property, with location/identification and dimensions as defined in the deed, with enough area (and height) to park one or more vehicles, and usually containing access to and from the space and the right to park one or more vehicles in the defined space, and the right to have trespassers on these rights excluded or removed or both. As a property owner the deeded parking owner pays property taxes. The deed may also include other rights or restrictions, such as requiring ownership of a unit in an particular building, or interpreting local zoning code to prohibit abandoned vehicles or other debris from being stored in the space (making it enforceable by others in the parking area, in addition to the local authorities). Some deeded parking spots may also restrict the type of vehicle (no trucks, boats or RVs), coordination of maintenance with adjacent owners, and may require right of first refusal to go to an association or other entity if the deeded owner decides to sell (thus keeping ownership of the spaces within the local community).