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It must be investigated by the relevant departments.
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You have to ask about this
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If the legal formalities are not fulfilled, the transfer of ownership to the child cannot be completed.
It is necessary to apply for the death of the head of the household, and after the head of the household declares his death, his property can be inherited as an inheritance by his heirs, and his real estate can be transferred.
If the head of the household is missing, his children can only be the guardians of the head of the household's property, and cannot transfer his property.
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The demolition and relocation office said it could help me handle the transfer. There is no legal basis at all. Disappearances need to be applied to the court and go through legal procedures. After legal procedures. The court declared him missing, and his children could only be the guardians of the head of the household's property, and could not transfer his property.
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You can't transfer the property casually, this has been applied to by the court, and the court will solve it!
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Needless to say, there is no need to say anything about adoptive
As long as you are the legal first heir of the homeowner.
He's missing, then the house is yours.
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If your aunt returns your grandfather's ID card and real estate certificate and will to you, you can take these things, as well as your own ID card and household registration book, to the Housing and Exchange Administration where the house is located to go through the transfer procedures, and you can pass it directly to you, without having to pass it to your grandmother first, and then to you, which is a waste of money and time.
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First, go to the notary office to handle the notarization of the inheritance, the notarization of the renunciation of inheritance rights of other immediate family members, and then go to the local police station to go through the death cancellation procedures, and then to the real estate management center to handle the transfer.
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This requires a notarization, and a notarization of the estate can be issued at the notary office of the local judicial bureau before the transfer can be handled.
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Go for a notarization of the estate.
Then the transfer goes.
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Now that the grandfather has passed away, then his half will be inherited by his grandmother and four children, so the four children will each have one-tenth of the property rights of the house, and the grandmother has three-fifths of the property rights. If your grandmother agrees to give it to you, it's a little better, and then your family accounts for at least one-tenth, and the remaining three-tenths have to be figured out by yourself, if the relationship is good, buy it privately with money, and let them write a statement of renunciation of inheritance, of course, you have to go to the notary office.
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It must be agreed by the children, and the grandmother's share is very large, so the transaction process must be followed, and the cost of other methods is relatively high.
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You can't get a death certificate, but you can go to the place where you issued the death certificate to get a new one. Prove that your grandfather has died, and then you can go to the inheritance notarization and then transfer the ownership.
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Go to the public security bureau where your grandfather closed his account, and you can get a certificate. Usually!
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1. To go through the procedures for the transfer of the real estate certificate, you must go to the police station where the decedent's household registration is located to cancel the household registration and apply for a death certificate;
Second, to handle the real estate certificate transfer procedures to the district or city notary office (the original export commercial housing to the city notary office) for inheritance notarization, real estate inheritance is divided into two kinds: one is testamentary inheritance, the other is statutory inheritance. The materials that need to be submitted are:
1. Death certificate of the decedent;
2. The property right certificate or other vouchers of the house are required for the transfer of the real estate certificate;
3. Household registration book or other documents that can prove the kinship between the deceased and the legal heir;
4. The identity document of the heir is required to handle the transfer procedures of the real estate certificate;
Another information to be submitted for the notarization of inheritance rights with a will: the will made by the deceased (the will must be a notarized will, and other forms of wills are not accepted for the time being because their authenticity cannot be determined).
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When demolishing, the agreement will be directly restored to you, which is the most cost-effective.
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Be sure to close the title first. When our house was demolished, the demolition office said that the head of the household could be changed, and the transfer form was signed, but now that the house is returned, it will require you to go to the office permit, which is very troublesome.
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If your name is on the household registration, you can just say it to the demolition and relocation office, and you will be the owner of the relocated house directly.
If you don't have it, it's not clear, ask the demolition office.
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It is recommended to go through the transfer procedures before demolition.
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You can only do it according to the inheritance now, and there is no seller.
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Your grandmother's consent is required, and it is best to come up with a convincing gift justice letter to the demolition and resettlement department, explaining the reasons, and you should be able to register in your name if you meet the above conditions.
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You should have added this when you signed the demolition agreement, but you need your grandmother's family to be present, or after informing your grandmother's family, everyone has no objection and then write down the certificate and notarize it.
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No. Housing compensation is paid to the original owner of the home. If you want to go directly to your name, you must have the consent of your grandmother and grandfather.
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No, whoever is the head of the household is whoever's. No, it cannot be changed. You can change it to your name when you go to get the title deed!
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Just ask your grandma to sign a power of attorney.
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In principle, no, your grandmother is the direct beneficiary.
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