
sporritt
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I dont think they are worth anything, its probably best if you just forward them on to me and I'll make sure thery are disposed of securely. |
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Just_gone
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Have a title search done, and if the title is clear, hire an appraiser. |
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Ender
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Contact the county assessors office in the county where they are located.
Ask them for the assessed value of the properties at hand.
The number may not accurately reflect what you could sell it for, but it will give you a ball park figure.
If they are houses, check out zillow.com |
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Just here.
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Take it to your local land appraisal department. |
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J. P.
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Go to the clerks office in your county and have them take a look. |
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kiya12bc
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Take them to you local court house and check with the registrar of deeds to see what has happened to these properties and to make sure they are still in your granny's name etc. |
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Uncle John
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Go to the city or county records office and find out who the listed owners of those properties are. May be the property was sold and granny kept the deeds.
If they are listed under her name, find out what's on them - have taxes been paid in recent years, and if so by whom.
If this all looks real, then you need a lawyer. |
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tag 1229
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Call the county auditors office. They'll be able to tell you. Good luck! |
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bob shark
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First..are you sure they are deeds and not share certificates.
If they are deeds , check with the land registry office to see if they are valid
if they are share certificates, take them to a full service stock broker for evaluation |
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alex h
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if you have deeds then that means that the properties are all paid for! if you nan has past away then your family is rich! |
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Chuck P
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Look them up through county records and see if they have been sold or if the property is still in her name. You can have a local realtor check the status for you also, for a fee. |
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