You have no right to ownership of real property by renting it for 20 years unless you had a written agreement with the owner that you were renting to own and you have met the conditions in the contract.
You have no right to ownership of real property by renting it for 20 years unless you had a written agreement with the owner that you were renting to own and you have met the conditions in the contract.
You have no right to ownership of real property by renting it for 20 years unless you had a written agreement with the owner that you were renting to own and you have met the conditions in the contract.
You have no right to ownership of real property by renting it for 20 years unless you had a written agreement with the owner that you were renting to own and you have met the conditions in the contract.
No. What you are talking about is a claim of adverse possession. Such a claim requires that you reside on the land without the owner's permission. Since you are paying rent, even though there is no written contract, the law says that you are asking the owner's permission to use the land.
I know that the right answer is the US constitution.
The buyer's remorse law only applies to unsolicited sales. If the renter came to your front door or called you on the phone, rented you the apartment, that you had no intention of renting otherwise, and had never contacted the renter on your own, you might be able to use the law. Otherwise the answer is NO.
Your mother-in-law doesn't own the land she only owns the right to the use and possession of the land during her life. Your sister-in-law may execute a deed and sell the land to you. However, you would acquire the land subject to the life estate owned by your mother-in-law. Upon the death of your mother-in-law you would be the absolute owners of the land.
From 1787 to 1957 this doctrine existed.
The Homestead Act of 1862 offered 160 acres of land to anyone who could live on it for 5 years, cultivate it, and make improvements to the land. This law was designed to encourage westward expansion and settlement in the United States.
Greenville
Dawes Act
Greenville
Some states have a law that you have to be 10 years old
The Homestead Act of 1862 granted 160 acres of public land to homesteaders who agreed to live on the land, improve it, and cultivate it for at least five years. This law aimed to encourage settlement and cultivation of the American West.
The constitution is the supreme law of the land.