Legal Question in Civil Rights Law in Virginia
Property
We have a cousin who contacted us
to come pick up some stuff because
he was being evicted. He did not
want the landlord to get it and he
was angry at his family because they
would not liquidate a lot of land left
to him, his mother and sister.
Unfortunately, the day he was to be
evicted he committed suicide. Now
the sister says the landlord is
threatening to sue the estate. She is
also asking for the stuff he gave us
the week before he took his life. Do
we surrender this property? We have
some letters he sent us by email
stating to come get this stuff. Also it
should be noted he was planning on
moving west to Vegas or Colorado.
He had not made up his mind yet.
The morning he committed suicide
him and the landlord had an verbal
confrontation that was ugly. It is this
landlord that is threatening to sue
the estate. What we have was picked
up the week before all this happened.
Please get back to me as soon as
possible. We also have witness who
saw him giving us this stuff as well as
saying he didn't want it back he just
wanted to start over. We had
planned on going through stuff after
his death and giving it to the sister
but not stuff he made a point of
giving us.
1 Answer from Attorneys
Re: Property
If the cousin gave some of his personal property to you as a gift, then the gift is yours to keep unconditionally, and you can tell the sister to take a hike.
As for the supposed threat emanating from the landlord to sue the estate,
this resonates as pure fabrication on the part of the sister, as such a suit would make little sense under these particular circumstances. (After all, how many assets could possibly be in this estate and on what legal theory would such a suit be premised?)
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