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Property Law Videos - How to disown a person from a property


Every person has complete rights over their self-acquired property and it is their will which counts for the very same. It is completely their decision to sell the property or to transfer the property and their rights continue as far as transferring the said property to any person of their choice. So if a parent does not want his property to not get transferred after they pass away so they can very well choose to do so by disowning such a person of their property. That ways, such a person would have no interest in the property.

The ancestral property refers to the property which has been passed down in the family ultimately to the father. Self-acquired property refers to the property as has come into the possession of the property in his own lifetime independently. Disowning is fairly simple procedure and can be executed in more than one way. Giving an advertisement in the newspaper: A person for disowning a person’s interest from his self-acquired property can give out an advertisement in the newspaper to that effect. The advertisement a notice to the world telling it at large that such a person henceforth would hold no interest in my property. This advertisement serves a valid proof of the intentions of the maker of such an ad. Executing a will: If a person wants to disown a person from his self-acquired property then he can execute a will. Such will contains the particulars according to which the property of the person is to be distributed after his death. While making a will he can exclude the person he wants to disown from his property and therefore make sure that he holds no interest in his property. By means of a Civil suit: A person can file a civil suit in the court of law and make the person that he wants to disown from his property the defendant in such a suit. While during the proceedings he can take a declaration from that person that he would hold no interest in the property of the person disowning him.

So there are more than one ways that a person can disown a person from his self-acquired property and make sure that he would bequeath all his rights in such self-acquired property of a person.