Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Owning Real Estate as Joint Tenants Can Be Risky or Costly

We have clients who ask us to transfer real estate to a child or children during their life-time in order to avoid probate and for other family reasons. This can cause undesirable tax results (capital gains) when the property is sold by the child or children in the future. Further, a joint tenant can sever the joint tenancy without notifying the other joint tenants which converts the nature of the tenancy to a “tenancy-in-common.”

The most famous decision illustrating this result is a 1980 California decision where a wife conveyed her joint interest to herself as a tenant in common before her death. Upon her death, her husband expected to own the property outright but owned it with his wife’s devisees under her will.

While Rhode Island uses a different form of joint holding by a husband and wife called a “Tenancy By the Entirety”, if another person is added as a joint owner, unexpected results can occur.

The moral... Counsel First!

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The Law Offices of Jeremy W. Howe, LTD. are ElderLaw attorneys in Rhode Island who specialize in Wills and Trusts, Estate Planning, Guardianship, Probate, and Veterans Aid and Attendance Benefits.

They also are Newport Rhode Island Divorce Lawyers, Attorneys, Mediators, and Arbitrators providing services for Family Law issues such as Divorce, Child Custody and Visitation, Support, and Military Family Law. 

Call them today at 401-841-5700 or visit them on the web at http://www.CounselFirst.com.

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