276°
Posted 20 hours ago

Mom's House, Dad's House for Kids: Feeling at Home in One Home or Two

£9.9£99Clearance
ZTS2023's avatar
Shared by
ZTS2023
Joined in 2023
82
63

About this deal

My parents house ownership was as tenants in common. They had mirror wills. My father passed away in 2011, after which my mother declared that everything had automatically been inherited by her. In 2014 my brother died suddenly leaving no will. After obtaining letters of administration and dissolving his company my mother made a new will. Unfortunately, at this stage, due to ignorance and having reached saturation point with this lengthy administrative process, the old wills got shredded. My mother passed away two months ago, leaving me as sole Executor and main beneficiary. I discovered that the title deed was still in both my parents’ names, so sent in the DJP form with his death certificate. However, this has not dealt with the restriction. Two probate applications have been applied for - one for my father (intestate) and one for my mother. I have appointed an attorney to handle these applications on my behalf. We need to save money so i have done all the funeral, legal and C1 confirmation stuff myself and has been quite a lot of hassle although actually very little work itself (it actually brings home to me how much solicitors charge for such simple tasks) mainly because things are such legalese - just a simple spelling mistake or wrong court can delay things.

What to do when a property owner dies - HM Land Registry

if the property is registered to a sole owner, you need to get probate before the property can be sold; Is there a time limit within which someone in such a position is expected to have completed everything, or at least kept a named beneficiary informed, especially if there is some genuine reason for delay.

MSE News

My Mother died in June 2017, grant of probate was issued in late September 2017. My older sister and her daughter are both executors. I have one younger sister and she, my older sister and I are named 'trustees' to equal shares of the estate.

Mum’s House Dad’s House – Item 295 - ELSA Support

Your Dad's share still exists but much depends on how it is now to be held and by whom but it essentially forms part of the trust already created. If you cannot afford to pay for long term care privately then the local authority must fund your care. The problem arises when we explore what ‘afford’ means. The local authority will view it as follows: You should be able to take over a demoted tenancy and stay if the property was your main home and you were living with the person who died for at least a year as their:If your sister wasn’t able to repay/fully repay the local authority before she bought the property from your gran, then the DPA would remain and your gran would be required to repay the debt once the sale had taken place.

many chefs in the kitchen? - Grammarphobia Too many chefs in the kitchen? - Grammarphobia

Question: Would the property which is in need of complete renovation be able to claim the reduction in VAT to 5% as uninhabited for 2 years (subject to HMRC Notice VAT Notice 708: buildings and construction clause 8.3)? When someone dies, there are lots of things to sort out. If the deceased person owned or part-owned a property, then this needs sorting as well. You'll be responsible for paying the rent if you take over the tenancy - you'll usually need to pay rent from the date the previous tenant died.At some point, depending on her needs, your gran may be eligible for an NHS-funded nursing care contribution or be eligible for NHS Continuing Health Care Funding. You can read more about both of these here: https://www.alzheimers.org.uk/get-support/legal-financial/nursing-care-… It's likely to be a starter tenancy if it's for a fixed term of less than 2 years. You won't usually be able to take over the tenancy . If it was fixed for 2 years or more

Asda Great Deal

Free UK shipping. 15 day free returns.
Community Updates
*So you can easily identify outgoing links on our site, we've marked them with an "*" symbol. Links on our site are monetised, but this never affects which deals get posted. Find more info in our FAQs and About Us page.
New Comment