I think I booed booed!!

I think I booed booed!!

Hi,
I need some opinions.I am buying a house from my girl- friend mother,she has a mortgage on the house, I am now buying it from her with a small down and small monthly were I make the payments to the bank from my checking account,had her sign a contract with all the details and the right to assign.Now my name and my girlfriend name is on the contract which I did not have notarised. Now my girlfriend mother wants to go and have my girlfriend name put on the deed but not me. And get get the property refinanced in her and my girlfriend name..
My question is can I stop this.


You signed the contract

It does not need to be notarized and is legally binding. There is no way to cut you out unless you assign it to her only. Laughing out loud As long as you have the original signed contract, you should be fine.

Maybe its time to talk to the future mother and law and find out what her concerns are?

ps: I have a contest going on at my journal right now. NO ONE has entered. All it is is to try to guess what my new iPhone contorted 'any connections' to. And I'll do a wholesale deal together with you! Won't you come to my journal and give it your best guess? I have to ask the guy I sent it to if he took a pic of it. Someone told me I need to send it to Ellen for her show where she highlights text mishaps. Mine is a TRUE classic! Isn't it (to the person who received the text (yes a fellow DGer...) (DETAILS IN MY JOURNAL ON PAGE 5)


Signed contract trumps everything...

Even her mom, which is really gonna make her mad. It doesn't take much to make a mess, but boy what a mess this could turn into. Socially speaking I mean, not legally. Usually guys have to worry about women using them, not their moms. Why the sudden (and very suspicious) turn of events? Your interests and your money are both protected, but if you don't get to the bottom of why she's trying to cut you out and fix it...

The only benevolent reason I can think of why she'd try to pull that crap is... maybe your credit's not as good as theirs and she thinks she can get a better mortgage if you're not involved? Any other reason, I'm scared for you man. You're the one who knows all the details and facts compared to us on this site. I'm not a religious person, but I find myself compelled to pray for you anyways. I say this every time I post, but I mean it now more than ever: Best of luck to you man. Sincerely.

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Duke Leto: "I'll miss the sea, but a person needs new experiences. They jar something deep inside, allowing him to grow. Without change something sleeps inside us, and seldom awakens. The sleeper must awaken." - "Dune."


Jim

It may be a good idea to go to the court house to have your copy of the contract put on file so that it will cloud the title so that she cannot put additional liens against it.

Karen

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Thank you all, Karen, to

Thank you all, Karen, to have my copy of the contract put on file I know I have to have it notarised, but does any other parties who signed the contract have to be there?.


It doesn't need to be notarized to record it.

Its a contract, and its signed. No one else has to be there, and you can file a memorandum of interest with the county and attach the contract along with it.


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