Legal Question in Wills and Trusts in California

mom passed away without a will

my mom passed away august 4th 2006. at the time i was only 17 years old and as a minor couldn't really take any legal action over anything. before my mom passed away my little sisters and i were living at her house. since my mom passed away when i was a minor my dad moved in with me and my little sisters to take care of us. i tried to get a probate lawyer to handle my case but he wouldn't accept it. i also tried to get insurance money but had difficult complications with that and ended up getting nothing. we kept trying to make the mortgage payments on the house but they wouldn't accept them because the money wasn't under my mom's name. i recently recieved a notice from the mail stating that my house was sold at a public auction in San Bernardino. i don't know what to do anymore and i was wondering if there was any sort of legal help or aid that i could get.


Asked on 5/10/07, 8:41 pm

1 Answer from Attorneys

George Shers Law Offices of Georges H. Shers

Re: mom passed away without a will

You do not say it directly but I assume that your parents were divorced. In California, if a person dies without a Will, the property goes to their spouse [much of it may be community property so goes to your Dad through that process]. If they are separated but not formally divorced, they still are married. If they have divorced, then the property goes to the children, assuming that a property settlement was already carried out so that all the property in your mother's possession was her separate property.

For the house payments, the mortgage holder can not refuse to accept payments from a non-owner; if the monthly payments are offered to the lender and the do not accept the payments, then the law treats it still as being the mortgage paid. Also, they would have to give you notice of any proposed sale and any money received above the cost of the sale and the amount of the mortgage that was unpaid [and no offer was made to pay it] would go to the owners of the house [your Dad, the children].

If the facts are as you have stated, you need to go to an attorney to recover the house, find out who should be owning it, etc. I suspect you may not be aware of all the facts that are significant; it seems as though it will be a somewhat complicated case, but not because the law that applies is complex, but rather the number of people involve is large. For some aspects you might also still be considered as a minor. I might be able to give you some additional help but you should be getting an attorney where you live.

Good luck.

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Answered on 5/10/07, 9:00 pm


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