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Commonly Asked Questions about Transfer of Property Rights

Voluntary alienation is an unforced transfer of title by sale or gift from an owner to another party. Involuntary alienation is a transfer of title without the owners consent.
Sole Proprietorship. This is the simplest and most common form used when starting a new business. Sole proprietorships are set up to allow individuals to own and operate a business by themselves. A sole proprietor has total control, receives all profits from, and is responsible for taxes and liabilities of the business
Answer and Explanation: Corporation. In the Corporation form of business organization, the ownership can be transferred easily.
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.
Family members can transfer property to one another without estate tax penalties by putting the property into a trust. When placed into an irrevocable trust, the property is no longer considered part of your estate after you die.
The most common way to transfer property is through a general warranty deed (sometimes called a grant deed). A general warranty deed guarantees good title from the beginning of time.
Transfer is an act by virtue of which title of a property is voluntarily conveyed from one person to another. It is a way of disposing of a property or an asset in the form of sale, money transfer, lease, license, lien, gift, etc. Transfer may or may not involve a legal process.