Who has rights on Grandfather property?
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Who has rights on Grandfather property?
If the properties were self-acquired and your grandfather passed away intestate, the properties will be divided as per the Hindu Succession Act, with preference to Class I legal heirs. If the properties were ancestral, all the legal heirs will have a right to it by birth.
Can father sell his property without consent of Son?
No, ancestral property be cannot be sold without consent of successors in case of major and in in case of minority you might have to take permission from the court. And if property disposed without consent can be reclaimed.
Can mother give her property to one son?
That’s where all children will have equal rights and you can demand a partition after your mother’s death. 2) If the property was self acquired by the grandmother her gift to your mother is absolute. If she gifts it to only one of her sons no one can file a suit against the same or seek a partition.
Can a daughter challenge father’s will?
Yes you can challenge it. But before that some aspect has to be seen that is whether property was self acquired property of your father and if so then your father has absolute right to execute will under section 30 of Hindu succession act.
Can I disown my child?
Once your children come of age, you are free to disown them. A parent can financially and emotionally cut off his own children with legal impunity. The children have the same right, but since the parents are usually richer and die sooner, children are largely limited to cutting the emotional cord.
Does Mother property belong to daughter?
Married daughter has equal right in the property of her mother as the son, and in case the mother dies intestate, the married daughter inherits her share equally with the son as per the Act of 1956. Generally, relatives of mother inherit and have priority over her husband and husband’s relatives.
Can son claim father’s property when father is alive in Hindi?
Son’s right in case of ancestral property As has been discussed before, a son has coparcenary rights since birth. He can even claim his share in the ancestral property before his father dies, i.e. during the lifetime of the father (by way of partition).