As a general rule, none. California does not recognize common law marriages. But, exception do exist.
One, you are named as a co-owner. Here you have a right to a portion of the property. If you are named as a joint tenant, you may receive all of the property (along with any other joint tenants or co-owners.)
Two, you are named as a beneficiary of the decedent's estate or trust, or a beneficiary of a bank or brokerage account, life insurance policy, retirement or IRA account, or (for real property) the beneficiary of a transfer on death deed.
Although this general answer is provided by an attorney, it should not be taken as legal advice regarding your particular situation and no attorney-client relationship is established. For help with your particular legal situation, please consult with an attorney.
Answer: When a person dies without a will and has a long term partner to whom he is not married, the partner is not an heir. Unmarried life partners MUST have good quality wills drafted to protect each other's interests in their possessions.
nope soz
no there are no rights
my partner and i have lived together for 11 years, we have a 10 year old child. The property is in my sole name. what are her rights as regards the property?
California does not recognize common law marriage. Community property rights can only be acquired through a legal marriage. Community property rights are governed by state law.
No. There is no common law marriage in the state of Indiana. An unmarried partner has no legal interest in their partner's property.
A British citizen living via Green Card status in California with a US wife has community property rights in California. Even if the property was owned by one of the partners before the marriage, once you are married in California the law says it belongs to both of you.
Both you and your parent's partner have rights to her.
Squatters have no rights in California. Squatters are trespassers.According to the California Civil Code a trespasser must occupy the real property hostile to the rights of the owner, openly, exclusively, continuously for five years and must pay the property taxes. During the time of trespass they have no rights. If the owner becomes aware of the hostile use of their property they can have the trespasser thrown out, post signs, give permission for use, contact an attorney, etc.
California Labor Code 2870 states that an employer does not have rights to an employee's inventions created on their own time and without using the employer's resources. This means that employees in California have the right to retain ownership of their intellectual property created outside of work hours. This law protects employees' rights to their own creations and can impact the ownership and control of intellectual property rights in the workplace.
none
You may have legal rights if you live in state that recognizes common law marriage. If not, you have no legal rights over your partner, their property or their estate.