only if you want to or the court takes them away from you****
2007-01-26 04:56:42
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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She put you on the deed because you were going to be married.
You did not say if you were paying the mortgage, a cosigner to it, or even if there was one.
If you have put money in the house you have a right to expect renumeration for giving up your interest. It is that simple.
Keep your name on the deed until you come to an agreement on who gets what and have a WRITTEN contract in place to carry it out.
Once you get your input back out of the property you are ethically obligated to "quit claim" the property.
Until then hold onto your interest.
Its like this, you were getting married and things turned ugly somehow. If she is pressing to have you off the deed then you deserve to get your money back. You could sign off, she could sell the property and you could be out in the cold. Assuming she did not hook you into the deal to get a free maintenance man a deal for recovery of your money is not unreasonable. Why don't you talk to her.
2007-01-26 05:29:31
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answer #2
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answered by Flagger 6
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You’ve already asked this. You need to talk to an attorney.
Based on the additional information in your other post about this....
Your girlfriend was an idiot for deeding the property to you in the first place.
Do you HAVE to deed it back to her at this point? Probably not. But she can go to court and claim that it was a ‘conditional’ gift and since the conditions have not been meet, she deserves the property back. Of course, you can easily claim that you deserve to receive reimbursement for the money that you spent on the property.
With all that said…if I were you and I didn’t give her the property back (on the condition that she reimburse my expenses) I wouldn’t be able to look myself in the mirror, but somehow I doubt that you’re going to have that problem. That says a lot about the kind of person you are.
Remember…what goes around, eventually comes back around.
2007-01-26 05:02:39
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answer #3
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answered by kp 7
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If there's a deeded ideal of way. not something that grew to become into executed with the prescriptive ROW has any result on it in any respect; a deeded ideal of way is an possession interest and could't be infringed with the help of the overturning of the prescriptive IMHO. yet i'm in basic terms a land call agent who seems at those issues all day. IF the courtroom ignored the ROW on the deed initially, something ought to take place whilst a criminal expert gets this back to courtroom. and clearly, not something is taking place right here devoid of criminal expert.
2016-12-16 17:55:31
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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Not if the deed is recorded. You and your fiance will have to make arrangements to take care of this matter legally just as a divorce. Hopefully you can work it out without attorneys.
2007-01-26 04:56:21
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answer #5
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answered by dancing11freak 2
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No....You have an interest in the house. If you sign over your rights you are basically saying that you are not entitled to anything. Which legally, you are. So don't sign it over unless you could care less. He can't sell the property until you do or you get paid also.
2007-01-26 04:55:18
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answer #6
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answered by Rica 82 5
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Not unless he takes you to court and wins...
2007-01-26 04:55:15
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answer #7
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answered by Back in the game... 5
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