Posted on November 3, 2010.
Act of preparation ...a I have to prepare the general security, disclaimer, and acts of limited warranty. How do I specify the marital status of single and married partiesa If anyone has an example of a completed act, including parties, review the information notaries, etc., it would be very useful! Thank you!
If you do not know, then you should not fill them.
You need to contact a qualified attorney Real Estate, because if you do not know how to fill them, then you do not know all the legal aspects of how they work.
If you have a general warranty deed DO NOT need a special warranty deed ... there is no reason for it.
The "devolution" in the title varies with each state and the laws that govern ... Again, if you're not familiar, you should not be done in the docs.
John Smith and Jane Smith, husband and wife as joint tenants (if they are married to another) - they may also hold property in another way too.
James Smith, a married man, and Jan Johnson, a married woman, as tenants in common (or as joint tenants, or what they want to retain that property, but it can not be community property).
Charles Smith, a single man, and Amanda White, a single woman, as tenants in common (or as joint tenants, or what they want to retain that property, but it can not be community property).
Michael Black, an unmarried man and Janice Brown, an unmarried woman, as tenants in common (or as joint tenants, or what they want to retain that property, but it can not be community property).
Single - meaning they were married before (not necessarily together), but are not married
Single - never married before
Married - currently married
For tenants in common, do not forget to specify their interests (10%, 20%, etc.), otherwise it will be presumed that each joint tenant has an equal interest.
Joint ownership - each roommate has an equal interest
No need for substantial amounts in the act itself - that would be in a separate document.
For more information notary, there is usually an acknowledgment notary who is already on the act.
Do you have any white actsa Otherwise, here's a site with FREE white acts (he has a grant deed and quitclaim deed):
http://riverside.asrclkrec.com/acr/FO.as ...
The site also features an acknowledgment before a notary.
These forms, I think, are valid in California, but it can give you the general idea.
Here's another site that acts as blank:
http://www.firstam.com/title-mi/html/cus ...
It seems that the forms are for Michigan, though.