Film, Media & TV0 min ago
taking a name off the land registry deeds
I want to take my name off the land register..my husband and I have a joint mortgage and both r names r on the land register..can itake my name off the land register deed certifcate whilst still being joint on the mortgage?..I have the forms from the land registry the tr1 and the ap1 and also the id1 form could you please help?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.No you can't, for the simple reason that a mortgage is secured against the property.
You cannot secure a mortgage against property you don't own.
If your husband can satisfy the lender than his income is enough to repay the debt, then your name could be removed from both the mortgage and the Title Register (the deeds). There will be costs involved if you both choose to do this.
You cannot secure a mortgage against property you don't own.
If your husband can satisfy the lender than his income is enough to repay the debt, then your name could be removed from both the mortgage and the Title Register (the deeds). There will be costs involved if you both choose to do this.
Not if you come off the mortgage as well, which is what Ethel said in the first place would have to happen.
The two are tied together. In the event that the mortgage company does let you do this, they will require you to sign some form of indemnity that allows you to be evicted in the event that your husband defaults on the mortgage. Otherwise it is left in the position of not being able to repossess the house with you still in it, not tied to the mortgage contract. That is what the mortgage company will be saying it wants you to get cleared through a solicitor - it wants to be sure you've been properly advised about this.
I don't understand why you'd want to do this either - lots of potential pain for no apparent gain.
The two are tied together. In the event that the mortgage company does let you do this, they will require you to sign some form of indemnity that allows you to be evicted in the event that your husband defaults on the mortgage. Otherwise it is left in the position of not being able to repossess the house with you still in it, not tied to the mortgage contract. That is what the mortgage company will be saying it wants you to get cleared through a solicitor - it wants to be sure you've been properly advised about this.
I don't understand why you'd want to do this either - lots of potential pain for no apparent gain.
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