In the UK, if you are a part owner of a property, the other owner generally cannot legally change the locks and refuse to give you a key without a court order. As a joint owner, you have a right to access the property. Doing so could be seen as an illegal exclusion.
If you are living in a property owned by another business or person, no. You have to contact the property owner and have them change the locks (or provide you with the new locks so you can change them). If you are the property owner and there is a person renting you can only change the locks after you've notified the renter about the change in writing. If you have evicted the renter and they refuse to leave/turn in keys or there is no renter then you can change the locks at will.
can a landlord change the locks on a commercial building without notice
no
Yes, if they are not an owner of the house, you are not subject to letting them in.
You do not need to change the deed. You should record a death certificate in the land records as a public notice that the joint owner has died and the title automatically passed to you.You do not need to change the deed. You should record a death certificate in the land records as a public notice that the joint owner has died and the title automatically passed to you.You do not need to change the deed. You should record a death certificate in the land records as a public notice that the joint owner has died and the title automatically passed to you.You do not need to change the deed. You should record a death certificate in the land records as a public notice that the joint owner has died and the title automatically passed to you.
Not unless you have a court order. Legally. He has a right to the premises, as he is an owner.
No one other than the owner of the account can change the POD beneficiary. However, there is a conceivable possibility that a person with a sole account naming a POD beneficiary later added a joint owner to that account. Upon the death of the original owner that account would become the sole property of the surviving joint owner who could then change the POD beneficiary.
No, a joint owner cannot rent a property without the consent of the other owner.
No. A joint owner has the equal right to the use and possession of the property.
One joint owner must convey their interest to the other.One joint owner must convey their interest to the other.One joint owner must convey their interest to the other.One joint owner must convey their interest to the other.
The surviving joint owner is the sole owner of the account and can maintain it or close it. That is the reason for having a joint account.