Now letter of Intent gone, but sibling gives Dad's home to her kids. I have personal letter from Dad he wanted house to go to both of us. Do I have any recourse? Sister lived in Dad's house for 20 winter while he was in NH and now feels it's hers to give to her kids??My name should be on deed, but only my deceased brother's name and hers are on it. Do I have any recourse??
State laws vary on when squatters actually do get the property. In the state where my family's cases happened, it is 21 years. You can look this up online. Go to the Secretary of State's website. You are looking for something similar in title to the (state name) Revised Code. Then look for a section dealing with Real Estate. It may be twenty pages long, more or less, clause by clause. If you have trouble finding the laws, call the Secretary of State's office and the office can help you find this info. The office won't give legal advice, but the office can point you to where the law is to read it. Lawyers - some are great, many are not so great. Many won't do their own research - or - even assign it to a junior lawyer. In our cases, over five years of court case time - research time billed: under three hours - spread over many lawyers. Lawyers are overwhelmed and take only the best cases they think they can win. I hope your house is worth it. If you get caught up in a court mess, it add up to $50,000 - $80,000 in lawyer fees and court fees. If you stay at Common Pleas level and she doesn't challenge the Ruling, then maybe you can get it all done for under $10,000.
Another point - there are "laws" and then there is "what happens". It seems that it is not so much 'what the laws are' - but 'who has the best story in court' and they apply the historic cases that seem to support their position. You may find their are better ways to get your inheritance than creating a lot of family painful drama that drags on and on and on and on, year after year. It is exhausting and most, if not all, family members nerves will be stressed to the max. Witnesses may die off over time before it is solved.
Lastly, be sure you want the house. Be careful what you think you want. You may be able to get your lawyer to force an "appraiser" to go through the home to make sure it is at FHA/ HUD standards for safety. Otherwise, that house you think is worth "x" based on the market comps - may in reality only be worth 1/3 or less in value....in my case that home that should have sold when my mom was killed, today has a critical repair issue and 26 years later is only worth about half of what my share would have been back then.
Good luck with all this....you have my "hug" from this end. You have to decide if the Journey is worth it -- or just hope your sister reaps her own karma is she is in fact being as selfish as you believe she is being.
Initial consultations with attorneys is often free but mention it at the onset...I have had many consultations always on the phone and these have given me direction as t which way to go/documents to acquire and so on.
Get a lawyer. Different states have laws covering this situation. In my state if someone dies without a will, the estate automatically has to go through probate court for the naming of and executor and the distribution of assets. The judge will decide after hearing all sides.
Like all the other posts, get a lawyer NOW. Even if your aunt has moved in or her kids have moved in, doesn't mean they can't be kicked out. Whatever the court decides. My lawyer told me, at least in Virginia, if you have instructions written on a piece of paper, the law DOES recognize this as a legal document. But again, get a lawyer to tell you what passes in your state.
I wish you much success. Sounds like an uphill battle but I think you will win this one.
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