If you think that you are being attacked, you should take a browse through the rest of the forum.
Ohiogal was trying to throw you a lifeline. If your mother and father had owned the house as joint tenants, then ownership would have passed solely to your mother when your father died. But, if the deed did not explicitly state that, then they were considered tenants in common.
What people have been pointing out is that neither you nor your sister actually own the house since, from what you say, the most recent deed still is in your mother's and father's name. Ownership has not been conveyed to either of you.
How do you figure that your sister "owned part of a debt?" Did she sign some loan documents?
I am not unsympathetic, but when all concerned ignore the legal niceties, you end up with a mess like this one.
Ohiogal was trying to throw you a lifeline. If your mother and father had owned the house as joint tenants, then ownership would have passed solely to your mother when your father died. But, if the deed did not explicitly state that, then they were considered tenants in common.
44-6-190. Creating joint tenancy with survivorship; severance; effect of Code section on other laws
(a) Deeds and other instruments of title, including any instrument in which one person conveys to himself and one or more other persons, any instrument in which two or more persons convey to themselves or to themselves and another or others, and wills, taking effect after January 1, 1977, may create a joint interest with survivorship in two or more persons. Any instrument of title in favor of two or more persons shall be construed to create interests in common without survivorship between or among the owners unless the instrument expressly refers to the takers as "joint tenants," "joint tenants and not as tenants in common," or "joint tenants with survivorship" or as taking "jointly with survivorship." Any instrument using one of the forms of expression referred to in the preceding sentence or language essentially the same as one of these forms of expression shall create a joint tenancy estate or interest that may be severed as to the interest of any owner by the recording of an instrument which results in his lifetime transfer of all or a part of his interest; provided, however, that, if all persons owning joint tenant interests in a property join in the same recorded lifetime transfer, no severance shall occur.
What people have been pointing out is that neither you nor your sister actually own the house since, from what you say, the most recent deed still is in your mother's and father's name. Ownership has not been conveyed to either of you.
How do you figure that your sister "owned part of a debt?" Did she sign some loan documents?
I am not unsympathetic, but when all concerned ignore the legal niceties, you end up with a mess like this one.