Legal Question in Real Estate Law in New York
My wife is the only person on the deed to her house. The house was owned by her brother who currently still has the mortgage in his name only but she has paid the mortgage for the last ten years. Now I came into the picture and want to purchase the house from her brother and get added to the deed with my wife as husband and wife. How does this take place?
1 Answer from Attorneys
Based on what you are saying, you need only record a deed from your wife to your wife and you as tenants by the entirety. That's a special land tenure available only to married people, and it protects each spouse against the other's creditors. The fact that the mortgage is in the name of a person who does not own the property is weird, but as long as the bank is accepting your wife's payments, should not be a big problem. You might not be able to get the bank to refinance the mortgage with your name and your wife's names. There has probably been a violation of the anti-sale clause (known as a due on sale clause) so I would not push to have the mortgage re-titled. The only practical effect is that the credit reporting bureaus will not know about your presence in the house; and if your wife ever needed to talk to the bank about something (e.g., failure of bank to pay taxes or insurance from escrow, or if you needed to get a temporary reduction in payments due to a reduction in income) you could have a problem, because the bank likely will not speak to her.