Quick Claim Deed
In 1991 my Mother added my name to the deed on our house on which I made the payments on for 10 years. I just found out that in 1994 a quick claim deed was filed and now the house is in her name only. I never signed any papers for a quick claim deed. Is it possible to have property taken out of your name without being informed about it, is that legal? :cry:
it is legal, and yes, it can be done without you signing anything.
I disagree. if she put your name on the deed, you must sign a deed to be removed - no what type deed
Ok. Lets think aabout something here. Do you have to sihanks.
Quote:
On 2004-06-10 13:25, psmconnor wrote:
In 1991 my Mother added my name to the deed on our house on which I made the payments on for 10 years. I just found out that in 1994 a quick claim deed was filed and now the house is in her name only. I never signed any papers for a quick claim deed. Is it possible to have property taken out of your name without being informed about it, is that legal? :cry:
If a Quit Clam deed was filed, you could get a copy of it at your county courthouse to find out who filed it.
Robert
[addsig]
How can he lose his rights to the property if he never signed them away?
Go get a copy of the quit claim deed that was filed and see - if your signature was forged or it has no signature (even better as you can make the clerk of court fix that in most states) then you have rights.
You might have to get a lawyer to enforce them.
THis is none of my business but did you ask your mother how and why she did that?
The conveyance was not perfected whitout your signature, unless Mom had P.O.A.
Quote:
On 2004-06-12 19:40, rickomarsh wrote:
The conveyance was not perfected whitout your signature, unless Mom had P.O.A.
It would appear that there should now be a cloud on the title if a quit claim deed was forged.
Did you or your mother record the deed that had your name on it? If it wasn't recorded, then I believe the only "official" one is the one in her name only....
how exactly did mom "add you to the deed" - this confuses me because you don't get to "add things" to legal documents.
I believe that if you had a legal document that was properly notarized that shows your 1991 interest in the proerty, then a forgery in 1994, you definately need an attorney AND a new mother.
please clarify the documents you are citing.