![]() r) to or from an organization exempt from federal income under Internal Revenue Code section 501(c)(3), provided such transfer is withoutconsideration and is in furtherance of the charitable or public purpose of such organization. q) of property sold to a surviving spouse pursuant to Ohio Revised Code section (R.C.) 2106.16. p) of an easement or right-of-way when the value of the interest conveyed does not exceed $1,000. o) to a trustee acting on behalf of minor children of the deceased. n) to an heir or devisee, between spouses or to a surviving spouse, from a person to himself and others, to a surviving tenant, or on the deathof a registered owner. m) to or from a person when no money or other valuable and tangible consideration readily convertible into money is paid or to be paid for thereal estate and the transaction is not a gift. l) to a grantee other than a dealer in real property, solely for the purpose of and as a step in, its prompt sale to others. k) of an occupied residential property being transferred to the builder of a new residence when the former residence is traded as part of theconsideration for the new residence. j) when the value of the real property or interest in real property conveyed does not exceed $100. i) by lease, whether or not it extends to mineral or mineral rights, unless the lease is for a term of years renewable forever. h) by a subsidiary corporation to its parent corporation for no consideration, nominal consideration or in sole consideration of the cancellationor surrender of the subsidiary’s stock. g) pursuant to a reorganization of corporations or unincorporated associations or pursuant to the dissolution of a corporation, to the extent thatthe corporation conveys the property to a stockholder as a distribution in kind of the corporation’s assets in exchange for the stockholder’sshares in the dissolved corporation. f) pursuant to court order, to the extent that such transfer is not the result of a sale effected or completed pursuant to such order. e) on sale for delinquent taxes or assessments. d) to evidence a gift, in any form, between husband and wife, or parent and child, or the spouse of either. c) to confirm or correct a deed previously executed and recorded. b) solely in order to provide or release security for a debt or obligation. Each deed that transfers real estate must start the process at the Auditor's Office.Ħ) The deed is filed at the Franklin County Recorder's Office.A) to or from the United States, this state or any instrumentality, agency or political subdivision of the United States or this state. ![]() There is a notary at the Franklin County Auditor's Office. ![]() (You cannot just attach the entire prior deed because conveyance standards prohibit multiple grantor/grantee clauses in one deed.)ĥ) Each grantor must sign the deed in front of a notary public. ![]() You will get a good idea of what goes in each blank by reading what comes before and after the blank.Ģ) Enter all the names of the current owners of the property as the grantors on the deed.ģ) Enter all the names of the persons you want to be owners of the property as the grantees. Note: if you are adding a name to the deed, you list the current owner and the new owner both as grantees.Ĥ) Attach the legal description of the property from the prior deed. You can obtain a clean copy of the legal description from the Franklin County Recorder's Office. How to fill out the deed forms from the Franklin County Law Library:ġ) Read the entire form carefully. ![]()
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