[WSBAPT] quit claim deed question

John McCrady j.mccrady at pstitle.com
Fri Dec 18 14:46:45 PST 2020


I do not see an advantage in recording a deed into the client.  Assuming the CPA is appropriately drafted and executed, recording the CPA, death certificate and Lack of Probate Affidavit would have the same result at a lower cost.

John McCrady
Counsel
Puget Sound Title Company
5350 Orchard Street West
University Place WA 98467
253-476-5721
j.mccrady at pstitle.com<mailto:j.mccrady at pstitle.com>
WARNING-FRAUDULENT FUNDING INSTRUCTIONS
Email hacking and fraud are on the rise to fraudulently misdirect funds.  Please call your escrow officer immediately using contact information found from an independent source, such as the sales contract or internet, to verify any funding instructions received.  We are not responsible for any wire sent by you to an incorrect bank account.

***Due to the Covid 19 outbreak and with concern for the health and safety of our employees and community; our University Place lobby will remain locked during normal business hours. If you need to make an appointment or have any questions or concerns, please contact us at our main office at 253-474-4747. We appreciate your patience during these uncertain times and look forward to consistently exceeding your expectations.***

From: wsbapt-bounces at lists.wsbarppt.com [mailto:wsbapt-bounces at lists.wsbarppt.com] On Behalf Of Sharon Rutberg
Sent: Friday, December 18, 2020 10:45 AM
To: wsbapt at lists.wsbarppt.com
Subject: [WSBAPT] quit claim deed question

Hello, listmates -

Surviving spouse had a community property agreement with her husband, recently deceased, that left everything to the surviving spouse. Decedent also had a LWT leaving everything to her, including a piece of commercial property that he held in his name only.  She would like to use the CPA to avoid opening probate. If  we did that we would record the CPA, death certificate, and maybe also a lack of probate affidavit.

The wrinkle is that she also wants to end up with a deed to the real property in her name - and it appears this might be wise in the case of the commercial property given potential dealings with third parties. Short of having her quit claim the property to herself, I don't see a way to get her on the deed without opening probate and using a PR deed (which would be straightforward to do).

Has anyone dealt with this issue? Is it ever proper for a RP owner to quit claim to herself to clarify title? Or should we just open probate?

Thanks -
Sharon

Sharon C. Rutberg, Attorney at Law
Salmon Bay Law Group, PLLC
1734 NW Market St.
Seattle, WA 98107
206-735-3177, ext. 2
sharon at salmonbaylaw.com<mailto:sharon at salmonbaylaw.com>
Website: www.salmonbaylaw.com<https://r.xdref.com/?id=0BIIqnRY031400&from=wsbapt-bounces@lists.wsbarppt.com&to=j.mccrady@pstitle.com&url=http://www.salmonbaylaw.com/>
Washington State Bar #47055

NOTICES
The contents of this message and any attachments may be protected by the attorney-client privilege, work product doctrine, and/or other applicable protections. If you are not the intended recipient or have received this message in error, please notify the sender and promptly delete the message. Thank you for your assistance.




-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mailman.fsr.com/pipermail/wsbapt/attachments/20201218/ba8238bb/attachment.html>


More information about the WSBAPT mailing list