Section 44-6-190 - Creating joint tenancy with survivorship; severance; effect of Code section on other laws

2 Analyses of this statute by attorneys

  1. Things People Ask: Should I Put My House in a Joint Tenancy?

    Taylor English Duma LLPJohn TaylorJune 21, 2018

    Cahill v. United States, 810 S.E.2d 480, 483-484, 2018 Ga. LEXIS 97. The Court noted the inapplicability of O.C.G.A. § 44-6-190 (a)(4), enacted after the events in the case. Id., note 2.

  2. Georgia Court of Appeals Enforces ‘Unambiguous’ Language of Deed

    Bryan Cave LLPLuke LanttaAugust 2, 2011

    The Court of Appeals determined that the language in the deed actually conveyed to the executrix and her husband a life estate in the property as tenants in common and that life estate terminated upon the death of either of them. In reaching this decision, the Court rejected two challenges from the husband’s heir.First, the heir claimed that O.C.G.A. § 44-6-190, which concerns conveyances to two or more persons, applied. The Court rejected this challenge because, while the deed conveyed the life estate to two persons as tenants in common, the deed conveyed the estate in remainder to one person, rather than two.Second, the heir claimed that in the husband’s will, the husband allegedly attempted to devise his interest in the property to his heirs and, thus, the will somehow superseded the deed.