It would depend on the laws in your state and other factors, like whether your grandfather's children are still alive and whether or not your grandfather has a Will.
No. Any right to visitation would need to be acquired through a court order.
In India, as per the Hindu Succession Act, a grandson has rights to his grandmother's property only if his parent who is the deceased's child is also deceased. The property will be divided among all legal heirs as per the law, which may include the grandson depending on the circumstances. It is advisable to seek legal counsel to understand the specific details of the situation.
It depends on how they took title. The deed by which the couple acquired the property must be a survivorship deed in order to avoid probate. They must have acquired as joint tenants with the right of survivorship or as tenants by the entirety.If they acquired as tenants in common then the decedent's estate must be probated.It depends on how they took title. The deed by which the couple acquired the property must be a survivorship deed in order to avoid probate. They must have acquired as joint tenants with the right of survivorship or as tenants by the entirety.If they acquired as tenants in common then the decedent's estate must be probated.It depends on how they took title. The deed by which the couple acquired the property must be a survivorship deed in order to avoid probate. They must have acquired as joint tenants with the right of survivorship or as tenants by the entirety.If they acquired as tenants in common then the decedent's estate must be probated.It depends on how they took title. The deed by which the couple acquired the property must be a survivorship deed in order to avoid probate. They must have acquired as joint tenants with the right of survivorship or as tenants by the entirety.If they acquired as tenants in common then the decedent's estate must be probated.
AnswerNo. Giving her grandson permission to live in her house gave him no right to ownership. Her will must be probated and the property will be distributed according to the terms of her will.
Property owned by married people should be acquired as tenants by the entirety. The next best form would be as joints tenants with the right of survivorship.
The answer depends on the deed by which the two acquired their interest in the property. If the property was acquired as tenants by the entirety or as joint tenants with the right of survivorship, the survivor automatically owns the property. If the property was acquired as tenants in common, the interest of the decedent will pass to her heirs at law under the laws of intestacy and her estate must be probated providing she didn't name a beneficiary by will. If there was a will and a named beneficiary the estate must be probated for title to pass to the beneficiary.
Property acquired prior to marriage is separate property and remains separate unless the spouse is granted on title and contributes to the mortgage payments from community funds, then they acquire an interest in that separate property in proportion to their contributions. Paying insurance taxes, utilities is not considered a basis to make the property community.
That depends on where your father lived with his last wife, how they held title to property, if he died testate or intestate and the laws of intestacy of the state where he died or owned property. If your father owned his property as a joint tenant with the right of survivorship with his third wife then you get nothing. If he acquired his property during his marriage in a community property state then you get nothing. You may inherit a portion if he owned property in his own name and died intestate or if he left property to you in his will. It depends on a lot of other details.
my grandson is only 2yrs and is refusing to walk on his right leg he is limping and dragging his right foot he only complained about it yesterday today as i said he wont walk
No. If the property was acquired as joint tenants with the right of survivorship and one dies, their interest passes automatically to the survivor by law. There is nothing for family members to claim.
By putting his right hand on that grandson's head (see Genesis ch.48).
You need to check the language in the deed by which the three acquired the real estate. If the property was acquired a joint tenants with the right of survivorship then your mother-in-law's interest automatically passed to the surviving owners (you and your husband) when she died. There is no need for probate. If the property was acquired as tenants in common with your mother-in-law then her next of kin would inherit her property. If your husband and his sister are the only children, and there was no will, then they would share her interest in the property equally and her estate must be probated in order for title to pass to her heirs at law.