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When someone dies without a will they are said to have died intestate and no one has immediate authority to act as their personal representative. Instead, one of their relatives needs to apply to the Probate Registry for a grant of letters of administration.
A warranty deed is different than a regular quitclaim deed. A quitclaim deed includes no warranty of good and marketable title. A warranty deed includes five warranties of title. If a buyer discovers an issue with the property title, they may have a legal claim against the title insurance company.
Personal Representatives is the collective name for either Executors or Administrators. Personal Representatives of someone who made a valid Will are called Executors. If someone dies without a Will (intestate) then the people in charge of their estate are called Adminstrators.
A statutory warranty deed is a legal document used to transfer real property. This form implies a guarantee about the titles history, functioning like a general warranty deed.
The answer is yes, its perfectly normal (and perfectly legal) to name the same person as an executor and a beneficiary in your will.
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A warranty deed, also known as a general warranty deed, is a legal real estate document between the seller (grantor) and the buyer (grantee).
There is one basic difference between a warranty deed and quitclaim deed: in each deed, the grantor makes a different legal statement. The warranty deed contains a promise by the grantor, called a warranty. But in a quitclaim deed, the grantor does not make any promise or warranty.
What does a quitclaim deed do? A quitclaim deed transfers the title of a property from one person to another, with little to no buyer protection. The grantor, the person giving away the property, gives their current deed to the grantee, the person receiving the property.
Michigan uses quitclaim deed Form 863, which is different in each county, so make sure to get the form at the office or website of the County Register of Deeds in the county where the property is located.
The Personal Representative is responsible for all of the following: Gathering property owned by the person who died. Notifying creditors and heirs or devisees. Handling debts and taxes.

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