justalayman
Senior Member
Well, he is wrong
The title was clearly as joint tenants with rights of survivorship. That means when one party dies, the remaining tenants still have a joint tenancy with rights of survivorship. It doesn’t change. Then when either of those two die, it goes to the only remaining tenant
The only issue that is different in your situation is given it was a marital home and your father was married, does the wife have any rights to possession or ownership based solely on that.
I took a quick look (surely not exhaustive). I found nothing stating there are dower rights or anything similar.
A property cannot be titled as tenants by the entirety if there are more than just a husband and wife as owner AND it has to be owned by both husband and wife. Your mother was never an owner so your citation does not apply.
The title was clearly as joint tenants with rights of survivorship. That means when one party dies, the remaining tenants still have a joint tenancy with rights of survivorship. It doesn’t change. Then when either of those two die, it goes to the only remaining tenant
The only issue that is different in your situation is given it was a marital home and your father was married, does the wife have any rights to possession or ownership based solely on that.
I took a quick look (surely not exhaustive). I found nothing stating there are dower rights or anything similar.
A property cannot be titled as tenants by the entirety if there are more than just a husband and wife as owner AND it has to be owned by both husband and wife. Your mother was never an owner so your citation does not apply.