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  1. W

    Quite the complex situation

    What would you suggest I bring up with an elder law attorney? I'm just trying to understand all of this and act accordingly. This seems to be a huge, complex scenario that has happened.
  2. W

    Quite the complex situation

    Ok. Well all of the documents that I'm talking about are on public records that can clearly be looked up, found, and read. I will contact an attorney but before this what I was asking is should it be a private attorney?
  3. W

    Quite the complex situation

    I found something out which might further mean I need a probate attorney but wanted to add that info to this. When my grandpa signed the land over to himself and second wife it was a warranty deed. It was said that it has to indicate with right of survivorship, otherwise the half that belongs to...
  4. W

    Quite the complex situation

    What I meant was a probate attorney, not private. I was replying with my phone and it auto-corrected. Basically, at this point, I want to look into getting the POA who abused her power to have her power revoked and actions corrected. I would like to look into a petition to the court for...
  5. W

    Quite the complex situation

    I agree and for the record if the principal was incapacitated, beings POA did not have a durable power, then she had no authority to sell the land anyways and especially not to herself for it was something like the typical $10 or $100. I just wonder what the process of this needs to be because...
  6. W

    Quite the complex situation

    I thought the purpose of a POA was to deal in interest of the principal? If the principal wanted someone to have it wouldn't that be doing exactly that? Does that have to do with her being incompetent? It keeps being argued that she is mentally competent as well so given that scenario could the...
  7. W

    Quite the complex situation

    Well one last thing I can think of for now unless more is added pertaining to estate. By the way, not that it means anything legally, but to explain why I am trying to do this is bottom line my grandpa claimed he wanted me to have this estate of 8 acres that is now owned by the POA. His wife, my...
  8. W

    Quite the complex situation

    I recently was looking into what people do when vehicles have been abandoned for many years and came across this. There is some private property where my dad's vehicles are stored that I am working on getting out of there and I noticed there are a few vehicles that have interested me as far as...
  9. W

    Quite the complex situation

    Ok. I will try to answer these questions to the best of my ability. 1.) All I know is that they were married a few years before my dad was born and he was born in 1957. I tried to find a marriage license but couldn't other than ancestry.com has something where it was recorded. 2.) My...
  10. W

    Quite the complex situation

    Ok. That makes perfect sense. The property by law should be my step-grandmothers anyways, right? Well, provided that the POA had non-durable POA and my step-grandmothers was deemed mentally incompetent before the land was sold by the POA to the POA. I hear that terminates her involvement if that...
  11. W

    Quite the complex situation

    It's not that what happened where someone outside of the family stepped in to do what was done was complex. It's all the individual actions and details that I feel make it more complex than necessary. So if what you say is true then I need to attempt to understand the Florida laws of intestate...
  12. W

    Quite the complex situation

    Ok. So I have this complex ordeal I am trying to figure out for my dad. Basically, my grandfather passed away and had remarried. He did not leave behind a will of any type. To my knowledge, half of the estate was supposed to stay with the woman he was married to, and half of it was to go to my...
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