Parent document Parent document

4 weeks ago

My father self purchased property, after he died patta transferred to all his legal heir as joint patta. But one of our brother is having the original sale deed document. If I want to register my share of property registrar says we cannot register without parent document what can I do

Anik

Responded 1 week ago

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A.Dear Client,

A parent deed, also known as a mother deed, is a crucial legal document that establishes ownership of a property from its inception. It contains essential information about the property's history, ownership, boundaries, and any encumbrances. To acquire ownership of a share in an undivided or joint property inherited through intestate succession, legal heirs must obtain the parent deed and register their share. Otherwise, they can file a partition suit in the Civil Court to obtain a decree of partition for the property. In such cases, the individual holding the parent deed must surrender it in court.
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Vidhi Samaadhaan Vidhi Samaadhaan

Kishan Dutt Kalaskar

Responded 3 weeks ago

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A.Dear Sir,
Get issue a legal notice to your brother to share the document and prior to it settle the matter by way of family settlement or partition deed showing what properties actually fallen to your share and get such document register.
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Vidhi Samaadhaan Vidhi Samaadhaan

Legal Counsel Vidhikarya

Responded 4 weeks ago

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A.Dear Client,
A parent deed is a document that traces the origin of property as well as all other relevant conveyance deeds. It is the main document to determine ownership of a property and is essentially required for registration of any share or part of that property acquired by a legal heir through intestate succession. A parent deed also known as a mother deed, is the original legal document that establishes the ownership of a property from its inception. It contains vital information about the property's history, ownership, boundaries, and any encumbrances. Unless an undivided or joint property is divided or partitioned through a decree of partition, the legal heirs who inherit that property cannot acquire the ownership of their share in the said property. Being a legal heir you can alone or jointly file a partition suit in the Civil Court for a decree of partition of that intestate joint property. In that case your so-called brother who is keeping the mother deed of the property has to surrender the same in Court. Reach out to an Advocate for guidance and steps.
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