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Does title insurance stop a sibling from claiming rights to a parents home that you purchased? |
if I buy my mom's house after she passed away and she did not want my brother to have anything becaseu he is a crack head....will title insurance protect me later from litigation if he feels he has a right to the home?...by the way, his 1/3 went directly to his kids No - title insurance is to protect against title defects that were not discovered during the title search phase of your home purchase that may crop up and cause you grief, legal fees, etc. An example of a title defect is a mechanic's lien against the home that was not released or paid off prior to sale and the title being transferred to the new owner - " Your brother suing you for his share of your parents' home is not a title defect. It sounds like your brother's share went to his children, so he will have to sue his children - not you or your mother's estate. Good luck - family issues suck. Did the will give his share to his kids? If so, yes the title insurance will protect you from him. no, I do not think so, you need see a lawyer Title insurance is only an insurance to make sure that there Not entirely. Your sibling is going to claim that your parents were forced to sell it to you either due to you threatening them or their own mental incapacity to enter into the sale, etc. If you think this is a problem, go see an attorney NOW. You can stop the problem before it starts. We are going through something similar in our family right now from an Uncle who passed away last month and wanted everything left to my son-in-law but he did not leave a will. He has no lineal children only step children. This really depends upon what your mother's will said, if she had one, & how the transaction is being conducted. It depends upon the terms of the title policy, not the will. The title insurance policy is a private agreement between you and the underwriter. It can be enforced in court, but it operates outside of the probate system. |
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