No. Those are two completely different legal instruments.
A Master Deed is the instrument that is used by a condominium developer (sponsor) to convert a single property to a scheme of individually owned units in multi-unit buildings that share an ownership in common areas. All unit owners and sponsors must follow the provisions, rules and regulations set forth in the Master Deed. The Master Deed is subject to statutory provisions and reflects the condominium laws in each state.
A warranty deed is the instrument used to transfer ownership of land when the owner guarantees that the title to the land is from from any defects or outstanding interests.
Yes. A warranty deed is a deed of conveyance.Yes. A warranty deed is a deed of conveyance.Yes. A warranty deed is a deed of conveyance.Yes. A warranty deed is a deed of conveyance.
A Texas warranty deed is a warranty deed that is drafted based on the requirements of the Texas statutes. Texas also has a statutory warranty deed.
Absolutely not. Only a warranty deed carries any warranty of title.Absolutely not. Only a warranty deed carries any warranty of title.Absolutely not. Only a warranty deed carries any warranty of title.Absolutely not. Only a warranty deed carries any warranty of title.
That may refer to a 'corrective warranty deed'.
No. A warranty deed cannot be reserved by a quitclaim deed. Deeds convey real property.No. A warranty deed cannot be reserved by a quitclaim deed. Deeds convey real property.No. A warranty deed cannot be reserved by a quitclaim deed. Deeds convey real property.No. A warranty deed cannot be reserved by a quitclaim deed. Deeds convey real property.
A war deed is a warranty deed. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warranty_deed has nothing to do with military war.
No. A bargain and sale deed is not the same as a warranty deed. The primary difference is that a bargain and sale deed does not guarantee that the seller holds clear title to the property.
I'm not an attorney. A warranty deed can go back to the original owner. Why not? The original owner can acquire the property again; there is no law against that. The deed might still be a warranty deed, but if the deed has become clouded in some way while under other ownership, the original owner might possibly not receive a warranty deed when he gets the property back.
No. A sheriff's deed has a certain legal meaning that is different from a warranty deed. The meaning also varies according to state laws. You would need to check your state laws to determine what title is conveyed by a sheriff's deed. In Massachusetts a sheriff's deed does not guarantee that it conveys any title. It only conveys whatever interest the debtor may own in the property. Title is not "good" for twenty years when it is acquired solely by a sheriff's deed. A deed from the debtor is needed to perfect title.
The difference is that a Limited warranty only offers warranty on objects that are labeled 87SQ-7681Qa76T. Sheriffs Deed is a deed that indicates your right for a object labeled QW786289-27252T.
Execute a new warranty deed. Write your name and the name of the person you want to add. Take the warranty to the notary public. Take the notarized deed to the land records.
A limited warranty deed warrants the title only for any problems that occurred during the seller's ownership. It does not warrant the title for anything that happened prior to the seller's ownership of the property. A buyer can sue the seller under a general warranty deed for title defects that occurred during prior ownerships but not under a limited warranty deed.