This form is an Authority to Release. The county clerk is authorized and requested to release from a deed of trust a parcel of land to the executor of the estate. The form must be signed in the presence of a notary public.
This form is an Authority to Release. The county clerk is authorized and requested to release from a deed of trust a parcel of land to the executor of the estate. The form must be signed in the presence of a notary public.
It's safer to use a warranty deed any time you are not entirely sure of your or someone else's ownership stake in any property. If you are transferring a property to your child or to a revocable trust agreement as part of an estate plan, then a quitclaim deed could do the trick.
If you need a copy of the current deed, contact or visit the Alameda County Recorder's Office. Copies of deeds are not available off the internet. There is an online name index.
You'll likely need to visit your County Recorder's Office if you need to add or remove an individual to or from your house deed, change your name on the deed, update an error in the document or make any other changes.
Get the forms from the county where the property is located. You can find the forms in the County Clerk's Office, Recorder's Office, or Assessor's Office.
Property ownership information can be requested from the County Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk. For more information, please visit their website to Request a Real Estate Record.
If you need a copy of the current deed, contact or visit the Alameda County Recorder's Office.
Each County has its own transfer tax and property ownership forms, which must be filed and recorded with your deed. You can obtain these forms by contacting the County Registrars Office where the property being transferred is located.
Now if gina sells the property. She can give her buyer a warranty deed. But i wouldn't advise thatMoreNow if gina sells the property. She can give her buyer a warranty deed. But i wouldn't advise that you'd want to convey the property via another quit claim deed.
Today, Californians most often transfer title to real property by a simple written instrument, the grant deed. The word “grant” is expressly designated by statute as a word of conveyance. (Civil Code Section 1092) A second form of deed is the quitclaim deed.
Moreover, a quitclaim deed does not convey any after-acquired title.