- Joined
- Jul 16, 2010
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- The Weirs, New Hampshire
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Last year the state we live in- New Hampshire- finally passed a law allowing home deeds to have a Transfer on Death beneficiary. Since we do not have a trust (which was not needed since most everything else we have has a beneficiary, with the exception of our cars and some savings bonds and we only have one heir) we were thrilled we could add this so if it turns out our son inherits the house he could avoid dealing with probate.
So we called our estate attorney to get it done. She also had to consult with the real estate attorney in her office (who happened to be the attorney we used when we bought the house (though in NH an atty was not required, we wanted one anyway). It took awhile and from what I understand it was because of the real estate attorney. (we had started this January 6th and it wasn't finalized until last week). In New Hampshire there is no standard TOD form. Attorney offices have to create their own and evidently we were the first people to request it at this law firm since it is a new law.
(As an aside, the estate atty is actually the daughter of one of the partners in the group that owns this law practice)
My husband and I had an appointment to pick up the recorded deed at the attorney's office last week and before we went I decided to pull out the warranty deed from when we bought the house 5 years ago. When I was looking it over I noticed it said our home was a 3 bedroom home. It is not. It is a 2 bedroom home. Have no idea why it says that and, of course, when we closed on the home so much was going on and when we received it in the mail from the attorney's office I just threw it in our safe. Never looked at it- it's all a lot of legalese and so forth.
So we go to pick up the new TOD deed and lo and behold it also says the house is a 3 bedroom because, of course, it took the information from the original warranty deed. I pointed this out to the attorney and she did not look too happy, but said several times she would talk to the real estate attorney to see if anything should be done- a correction or whatever - and she'd let us know. She said "Well, it's recorded". Then we paid her the $500 for the TOD and left.
Fast forward a week later we never heard from her so I called yesterday and her paralegal said she'd check and get back to me and didn't. So I called again today and the paralegal said the estate attorney hadn't talked to the real estate attorney as of yet.
I am kind of mad at myself because the estate attorney did send me the draft TOD before she did anything official with it. I looked it over and I noticed my son's address was incorrect and called her to fix that, but somehow I missed the sentence with the 3 bedrooms. Not to mention my eyesight is not the greatest.
Anyhow, does anyone know if this is a big deal? Does it matter at all? I looked through all our house purchase documents and nothing mentions the number of bedrooms- just that its a "Wolfeboro" ranch home on lot 30. That is correct. It also said on the purchase and sale documents to see Exhibit 1 - House Plan, but there isn't one. Thankfully my husband actually kept a copy of the builders conceptual drawing of the home with the diagram of the rooms that he used in his sales binder. Mind you every ranch home in this neighborhood is exactly the same. There were no 3 bedroom ranches built (though later a few owners might have finished off their basements on their own to add more bedrooms).
This is hanging on me now because here we wanted to make things easier for our son and I don't want this to be an issue later on for him.
So we called our estate attorney to get it done. She also had to consult with the real estate attorney in her office (who happened to be the attorney we used when we bought the house (though in NH an atty was not required, we wanted one anyway). It took awhile and from what I understand it was because of the real estate attorney. (we had started this January 6th and it wasn't finalized until last week). In New Hampshire there is no standard TOD form. Attorney offices have to create their own and evidently we were the first people to request it at this law firm since it is a new law.
(As an aside, the estate atty is actually the daughter of one of the partners in the group that owns this law practice)
My husband and I had an appointment to pick up the recorded deed at the attorney's office last week and before we went I decided to pull out the warranty deed from when we bought the house 5 years ago. When I was looking it over I noticed it said our home was a 3 bedroom home. It is not. It is a 2 bedroom home. Have no idea why it says that and, of course, when we closed on the home so much was going on and when we received it in the mail from the attorney's office I just threw it in our safe. Never looked at it- it's all a lot of legalese and so forth.
So we go to pick up the new TOD deed and lo and behold it also says the house is a 3 bedroom because, of course, it took the information from the original warranty deed. I pointed this out to the attorney and she did not look too happy, but said several times she would talk to the real estate attorney to see if anything should be done- a correction or whatever - and she'd let us know. She said "Well, it's recorded". Then we paid her the $500 for the TOD and left.
Fast forward a week later we never heard from her so I called yesterday and her paralegal said she'd check and get back to me and didn't. So I called again today and the paralegal said the estate attorney hadn't talked to the real estate attorney as of yet.
I am kind of mad at myself because the estate attorney did send me the draft TOD before she did anything official with it. I looked it over and I noticed my son's address was incorrect and called her to fix that, but somehow I missed the sentence with the 3 bedrooms. Not to mention my eyesight is not the greatest.
Anyhow, does anyone know if this is a big deal? Does it matter at all? I looked through all our house purchase documents and nothing mentions the number of bedrooms- just that its a "Wolfeboro" ranch home on lot 30. That is correct. It also said on the purchase and sale documents to see Exhibit 1 - House Plan, but there isn't one. Thankfully my husband actually kept a copy of the builders conceptual drawing of the home with the diagram of the rooms that he used in his sales binder. Mind you every ranch home in this neighborhood is exactly the same. There were no 3 bedroom ranches built (though later a few owners might have finished off their basements on their own to add more bedrooms).
This is hanging on me now because here we wanted to make things easier for our son and I don't want this to be an issue later on for him.
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