Jump to content


Photo

Wills, Trusts, and Estates


  • Please log in to reply
1 reply to this topic

#1 kwilson1

kwilson1

    New Member

  • Members
  • 2 posts

Posted 27 May 2012 - 12:29 PM

My father-law gave one acre to his nephew the condition was that him and his wife would look after them since my husband drove a truck and the other 2 brothers lived out of town,my husband and his brothers told there dad and mom that would be okay. One month later they moved in a double wide trailer and took up 2 acres my husband ask the question "I thought it was just one acre" my mother-n-law said they told them that they signed a notarized document giving them 2 acres my father-n-law is 88 my mother-n-law was 85 she is deceased now neither one of them can remember signing this they remember signing the one acre but not giving them 2 the nephew's bother and sister-n-law are the ones that notarized this they told my husband and his brothers that they were at a birthday party and had them to sign it there than having to have them make two trips to town.The piece of paper that my father-n-law has looks like it was photo copied the lines don't line up like they should have if it was one piece of paper,do we have a case that we could work with this haunted my mother-n-law till she died and still my father -n-law still says he would have not done that because that's not what they agreed the nephew has since died and his wife keeps inching closer and every chance she gets she calls the sheriff on anyone that happens to accidently on her grass.


 



#2 Fallen

Fallen

    Platinum Contributor

  • Members
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • 57,297 posts

Posted 30 May 2012 - 04:54 AM

There's no "we" here; there is your father-in-law (and perhaps, if your MIL didn't have a will or named her kids in the will as to receive X, her sons  might in your unnamed state have an interest in what's what under intestacy succession).


"The piece of paper that my father-n-law has looks like it was photo copied the lines don't line up like they should have if it was one piece of paper..."

But this doesn't really tell us anything.


Your father-in-law may want to talk with a local real estate attorney about what happened.






0 user(s) are reading this topic

0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users