Yes, you can combine two properties as long as they are adjacent. It is done by talking to the county clerk. The deeds and property description will be merged in the records and the taxes adjusted accordingly.
The property will remain in the estate of the decedent and no one will have legal title. In order for legal title to pass to the heirs the estate must be probated. No one can sell, refinance, insure or otherwise deal with the property until the estate is probated. The longer such a situation exists the more difficult and costly it will be to clear the title.Many such properties end up falling into disrepair and taken by the town for non-payment of property taxes.The property will remain in the estate of the decedent and no one will have legal title. In order for legal title to pass to the heirs the estate must be probated. No one can sell, refinance, insure or otherwise deal with the property until the estate is probated. The longer such a situation exists the more difficult and costly it will be to clear the title.Many such properties end up falling into disrepair and taken by the town for non-payment of property taxes.The property will remain in the estate of the decedent and no one will have legal title. In order for legal title to pass to the heirs the estate must be probated. No one can sell, refinance, insure or otherwise deal with the property until the estate is probated. The longer such a situation exists the more difficult and costly it will be to clear the title.Many such properties end up falling into disrepair and taken by the town for non-payment of property taxes.The property will remain in the estate of the decedent and no one will have legal title. In order for legal title to pass to the heirs the estate must be probated. No one can sell, refinance, insure or otherwise deal with the property until the estate is probated. The longer such a situation exists the more difficult and costly it will be to clear the title.Many such properties end up falling into disrepair and taken by the town for non-payment of property taxes.
all numbers have the property of one
zero property additive property
Yes, in some instances two properties can be covered by one mortgage. It is called a blanket mortgage.
That your properties are fine. It means no one has robbed your property.
B: Physical Property
One of the properties metal has,is that it is hard.
You can combine two deeds into one only if the property is adjoining and owned by the same people. Deeds are done by using "legal" descriptions of the property..ie: lot and block & subdivision or Metes & bounds but each "individual" recorded deed should be transferred that way. It can lead to a lot of issues for people later on down the line if you start combining them. Mortgage lenders usually will not lend money on property if it has more than one house on it and is incorporated in one deed. They will make you have 2 deeds on two separate lots with houses.
If you are not on the deed you have no rights in the property. If you are not legally married and the owner dies you have no legal rights in the property.
The case isn't that some things "are not properties," but some aspects of an object/substance/etc. are not significant properties. If someone told you that Y is not a property of X, they are mistaken. Y may very likely be a property, just not the right kind. For example, how Y smells is a property, a physical one. Whether or not it can be dissolved by a particular acid is also a property, but a chemical one.
A deed is the legal document used to transfer the title of real property from one party to another.
as a legal term, some object or surface or right of way which extends off of one building/property and (onto or over the adjacent property) and may or may not have a right of way as may be defined in an easement agreement between the properties or if not, may be grandfathered under real property law