Warranty Deed - Two Individual Grantors to One Individual Grantee - Alabama 2025

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An owner who wants to add a co-owner to his property, will have to do so by way of creating a new deed altogether. This new deed must also be registered at the sub-registrars office, to attain a legal validity under the Transfer of Property Act.
Generally, if there are two names on the deed and the deed does not describe how the property is owned, the default is that it is owned as tenants in common if the co-owners are not spouses and tenancy by the entirety if they are.
In Alabama, survivorship deeds are sometimes used for ownership among multiple property owners. Following the death of one of the owners, a survivorship deed passes ownership on to the surviving owner automatically, by operation of law, without the need for probate.
a. These interests are not necessarily equal; e.g., two joint tenants do not necessarily each own half of the property. One owner may sell, transfer or otherwise dispose of his or her share of the property without permission of the other owner(s) but cannot take these actions with respect to the entire property.
If there is no surviving spouse, or there is property left after the spouse receives his or her share, it passes under the following priority: All of the property passes to the issue, unless there are none. If none, all passes to the parents.
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A warranty deed does not actually prove ownership of a property. The best way to establish ownership is through a title search, which examines public records to determine if any liens, third-party claims, or other issues could affect ownership.
Create a revocable living trust to distribute your property to the person of your choice. When a trust is created and property titled to the trust, there are provisions designating to whom the property passes after your death, and that can be accomplished without having to go through the probate process.
Property owned in joint tenancy with right of survivorship automatically passes to the surviving owners when one owner dies. No probate is necessary. Joint tenancy often works well when couples (married or not) acquire real estate, vehicles, bank accounts, or other valuable property together.

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