Exchange Currency

escheat

The reversion of property to the state or county, as provided by state law, in cases where a decedent dies intestate without heirs capable of inheriting, or when the property is abandoned.

Related information about escheat:
  1. Escheat - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    Escheat /ɨsˈtʃiːt/ is a common law doctrine which transfers the property of a person who dies without heirs to the crown or state. It serves to ensure that ...
     
  2. Escheat - Legal Dictionary - The Free Dictionary
    The power of a state to acquire title to property for which there is no owner. The most common reason that an escheat takes place is that an individual dies ...
     
  3. Escheat - Merriam-Webster Online
    a : the reversion of lands in English feudal law to the lord of the fee when there are no heirs capable of inheriting under the original grant. b : the reversion of ...
     
  4. Accounts -- Abandoned or Unclaimed
    Jun 25, 2007 ... Accounts – Abandoned or Unclaimed. The Escheatment Process. All states require financial institutions, including brokerage firms, to report ...
     
  5. Escheat Definition | Investopedia
    When property and/or an estate is transferred to the government because a person has died without a will or an heir to his or her estate.
     
  6. Unclaimed Property - ESCHEAT
    Oct 26, 2012 ... Escheat home page. ... UNCLAIMED PROPERTY - ESCHEAT. The documents on this page are available in PDF format. This requires the use ...
     
  7. Escheat | Define Escheat at Dictionary.com
    the reverting of property to the state or some agency of the state, or, as in England, to the lord of the fee or to the crown, when there is a failure of persons legally ...
     
  8. escheat - Wiktionary
    escheat. Definition from Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Jump to: navigation, search ... escheat (third-person singular simple present escheats, present participle ...