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My sister lives in my parents house, she and her husband have been saying for a few years now that they were going to buy it. My mother has not lived with them, she has lived with another sister in town as her house is on the lake. Mom has passed away, and of course sister in the house has said they can quick deed the house because there is no will. Which there is but believe that she has destroyed it because of her only being left 1.00. The house is also in forclosure, and when that summons was served they served it to the house on the lake instead of where my mother lived and my sister signed her own name, the wrote room mate of and signed my mothers name. Is all of this legal and true? Does she have a right to quick deed just for living in the house. I have proof in writing they were planning on buying the house.

2007-01-29 01:49:23 · 3 answers · asked by Mary R 1 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

3 answers

The quicker you contact an attorney the better off you will be. You need to call an attorney NOW - Today - Before Lunch ! ! !
Good Luck

2007-01-29 01:58:28 · answer #1 · answered by Prince Thom 2 · 0 0

First of all, it is a called a quitclaim not. There is not such thing as quick deed.

Second, your sister and her husband simply cannot take the property just because they lived their. Your parents would've had to deed it to them while they were alive or specifically provided for them to receive their house in the will. And because there is not will or living trust, you must look to the laws of intestate succession of your state. Those law will governs who inherits the property.

Third, if the property is in foreclosure, it means nobody is making the payments. Someone needs to make the payments or you will all lose out on the property.

You need to need a local probate attorney right away. You need court intervention to stop the foreclosure until the matter can be settled between you, your sister and any other siblings.

2007-01-29 02:46:23 · answer #2 · answered by Carl 7 · 0 0

Sounds complicated. If this isn't property homework, then you need to contact a lawyer!

2007-01-29 01:55:52 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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