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Old February 25th, 2006, 12:13 PM posted to microsoft.public.access.forms
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Default Template for QuitClaim Deed

Larry,

It has an effect! But along with it comes a fight and legal
battles before it will be recognized, so whoever files one
of these must be ready for that.

As Rick said, however, I do not see how Access fits into the
picture as there cannot be a great number of people using
this method of property transfer.... unless ajbart is
putting together a database to do forms generation for
others. In this case, however, if someone can't write the
claim, they won't be prepared to defend it either.

Have an awesome day

Warm Regards,
Crystal

MVP Microsoft Access
strive4peace2006 at yahoo.com



Larry Linson wrote:
"Rick B" wrote

If you are looking for a form template, I'd
suggest doing a search in google or similar.
Personally, I'd try to find one designed for
my particular state. I know in Texas you
can find most common forms on the
TREC website.

Date: Thursday, February 23, 2006 2:16 PM

That is nice, but what does this have to do
with Microsoft Access, the database application?


If you are looking for a form template, I'd
suggest doing a search in google or similar.
Personally, I'd try to find one designed for my
particular state. I know in Texas you can find
most common forms on the TREC website.


I found a sample Quitclaim deed, in Microsoft Word file format, done by a
Texas attorney, by Googling. You really should check with your attorney as
to whether a Quitclaim Deed has any real effect in your jurisdiction.

Larry Linson
Microsoft Access MVP