Answer: You conveyed any interest you owned when you quitclaimed it to the grantee. You cannot revoke a deed unless perhaps there was a revisionary clause and the conditions were not met.
If there is a mortgage, where both people have the responsibility to pay, they may opt to not accept the quit claim. Easiest thing to do is to refinance in one name.AnswerYour question needs more detail. A deed cannot be "revoked" by a mortgage company.
Just sign the quit claim deed and have recorded downtown.
Yes. You effectively "quit" your claim of ownership.
Normaly only if you have not recorded such quit claim...
A quit claim is a method of transferring property. It has nothing to do with the value of the estate.
Do you have to have an attorney for a quit claim deed if you are just changing your name
It is a "quit claim deed" that you have to obtain and you have to refinance to drop the other name. It is a "quit claim deed" that you have to obtain and you have to refinance to drop the other name. It is a "quit claim deed" that you have to obtain and you have to refinance to drop the other name. It is a "quit claim deed" that you have to obtain and you have to refinance to drop the other name.
It would depend on who granted the uncle the power of attorney. If the grandmother granted the PoA, she can revoke it at any time. If the PoA was granted by a court, no she cannot.
u quit!
Quit claim simply means that you are giving up all of your existing legal rights to a piece of property. You can even quit claim something that you never had rights to! It does not provide any warranty as to who owns the property, if there are liens on it or other problems with the title.
Law and Order - 1990 Quit Claim 18-7 is rated/received certificates of: USA:TV-14
You can quit claim your rights to the property. However, that doesn't quit claim your spouse's rights to the proprty. Once married the spouse in most states has rights to the property.