There is no such thing as squatters "rights" in the United States. Until a person has satisfied all the state requirements to perfect a claim of adverse possession, and then takes the legal steps to perfect that claim, they are considered a trespasser.
The period required to perfect a claim of adverse possession in Pennsylvania is excerpted below:
No. You have no rights in a parent's property while they are living. An inheritance comes from the property a decedent owns at the time of death. Death makes that property 'inheritable'. There is no such thing as an inheritance from a living person.
Real rights are rights that pertain to property and allow the holder to exercise control over a thing, such as ownership (dominium), usufruct (the right to use and enjoy the benefits of someone else's property), servitudes (rights of way), and hypothec (mortgage rights). Personal rights, on the other hand, are rights that exist between individuals and typically involve obligations, such as contractual rights, rights of inheritance, family law rights, and rights arising from torts. The distinction lies in that real rights are enforceable against the world (erga omnes), while personal rights are enforceable only against specific individuals (inter partes). A recommended book for further reading is "Property Law: A Contemporary Approach" by Amy H. Kastely and others.
One historical thing you can see in Philadelphia is the liberty bell brought from England in 1752.
Mass is a property of matter but mass is not the only property of matter. Mass and property do not mean the same thing any more than Ford and car mean the same thing.
Co-buyer = Name is on the title and has rights to the property. The lender will PROBABLY insist that this person also sign the loan as a co-signer or joint borrower. Co-signer = Name is on the loan and is obligated to make the payments if the primary borrower does not. This gives you NO rights to the property.
no it is no such thing
there is no such thing .
No, collective rights are horrible compared to individual rights.
Those are two terms used to describe the same thing: land, the rights that have accrued to it and any improvements that have been made to it.Those are two terms used to describe the same thing: land, the rights that have accrued to it and any improvements that have been made to it.Those are two terms used to describe the same thing: land, the rights that have accrued to it and any improvements that have been made to it.Those are two terms used to describe the same thing: land, the rights that have accrued to it and any improvements that have been made to it.
Depends on the situation. Some states allow you to pay the taxes on abandoned properties for up to five years, and in in some states it's up to 7 years, if and when you have occupied the property and have actually been paying the taxes and it hasn't been claimed by anybody else. But, just because you decided to become a squatter and have not done anything legally, such as paying the taxes for the property, does not give you the right to claim a property as your own. Check with your state's laws.
With intellectual property, there isn't necessarily a "thing" you can point to and say "this is mine." It's especially confusing when you're talking about a given physical copy of a work: the film Titanic is the intellectual property of 20th Century Fox and Paramount, but a particular DVD of it may be owned by a person or a library. Controlling a particular instance of a work (owning a book, buying an mp3, having a print of a painting) gives you no rights to the intellectual property embodied in it.
It depends on your location. Squatters are treated differently in different countries.Generally, in the United States, there is no such thing as squatters rights. Squatters are trespassers. A vigilant property owner can have unauthorized dwellers arrested for trespassing. If a tenant paid rent at one time and remained on the property without paying rent, the landlord can commence an eviction proceeding. If a tenant was allowed to use property without paying rent, the owner could issue a written notice if she desires that they leave the premises. There are some unusual court cases where people have claimed adverse possesion by unauthorized use of the property for a number of years. However, that's not possible in every jurisdiction. There are no codified "squatters rights". See related question link for information about adverse possession in the U. S.You should seek the advice of an attorney if someone is claiming "squatters rights" in your property.