Texas Disaster Legal Help Podcast
Texas Disaster Legal Help Podcast
The Importance of Title Clearing for Disaster Survivors
Join Texas Disaster Legal Help (TDLH) for their new podcast on title clearing. Listen as Speaker Dina Hardwick delves into the effects of an uncleared title on a disaster survivor. Learn quick ways to clear the title without probate. Find out how to deal with manufactured homes transfers of ownership, and how to determine if the mobile home is personal property or real property.
Visit our website at https://texasdisasterlegalhelp.org/
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Speaker:
Dina Hardwick (Texas RioGrande Legal Aid)
(Recorded Oct 9,2020)
00:04
okay hello folks this is pablo
00:07
almaguer
00:08
as you all know the director of private
00:09
Bar government relations and that's a
00:11
title that does not come with money by
00:12
the length of the title
00:14
it's just a fancy one i am an attorney
00:15
for twenty two years there
00:17
and working together with belinda
00:19
martinez and stuart campbell here and
00:21
this series of
00:21
podcasts we're doing for the tdlh
00:24
website
00:25
and some of the resources that pro
00:27
bono attorneys can use
00:29
to give you an idea real quick what this
00:30
project is about before we go to our
00:32
great speaker here i'm just going to
00:33
tell you a little bit about it
00:34
we are a coordinated project between
00:37
Legal aid of northwest texas lone star
00:38
legal aid in texas rio grande legal aid
00:40
aimed at improving access to justice for
00:42
those affected by disasters a project
00:44
allows both disaster survivors and pro
00:46
bono attorneys
00:47
to access critical resources in one
00:49
place while at the same time making it
00:51
easier to connect disaster survivors
00:53
needing legal help
00:54
with volunteer attorneys willing to
00:55
provide it in this way the project team
00:57
hopes to increase the number of disaster
00:59
survivor clients who receive high
01:00
quality legal assistance
01:02
as they continue to navigate the
01:03
recovery process after a disaster
01:05
and provide the support and membership
01:07
And mentorship pro bono attorneys need to
01:09
achieve
01:10
success the website in case you don't
01:12
know about it and if you're not there
01:14
watching this video
01:15
and for some reason you are somewhere
01:16
else or listening to this podcast
01:18
the website is
01:23
texasdisasterlegalhelp.simplejustice.org
01:24
once again texas disaster legal help
01:28
dot simplejustice.org look at that
01:30
website you'll find many more resources
01:32
and information to help you
01:33
to do this case or pro bono case that
01:35
you're looking at so this time i'm going
01:36
to hand it over to belinda martinez
01:38
who's going to introduce our speaker and
01:40
the topic they should be speaking about
01:41
today
01:41
belinda thank you pablo well our topic
01:45
today
01:46
is title clearing and our guest today is
01:48
dina hardwick
01:50
dina received her bachelor's in
01:51
education from texas state university
01:53
san marcos
01:54
after teaching public school in san
01:56
antonio for several years dina accepted
01:58
an academic scholarship to texas tech
02:00
university school of law in lubbock she
02:02
graduated in two thousand four her legal experience
02:05
includes criminal defense
02:06
probate guardianship and real estate
02:09
title work
02:10
her passion for public interest work led
02:12
her to leave a successful private
02:14
practice and joined texas rio grande
02:16
legal aid in two thousand seventeen
02:18
after hurricane harvey devastated the
02:20
communities she calls
02:22
home within TRLA she's a member of the
02:24
disaster assistance team
02:26
the wills probate team and assists the
02:28
housing team
02:30
the majority of her case work includes
02:31
helping clients navigate
02:33
FEMA ihp and the
02:37
sba disaster loan process handling
02:40
probate matters and clearing title to
02:42
various types of property for her
02:43
clients to qualify for housing
02:45
assistance
02:46
she is a passionate advocate for our
02:48
clients as they work towards rebuilding
02:50
their lives following the devastation of
02:51
natural disasters
02:53
thank you for joining us dina
02:54
absolutely thank y'all for asking me to
02:56
be a part of this i'm excited
02:58
well let's go and get into it our
03:00
listeners come from variety of
03:01
backgrounds so let's
03:02
just start with the basics what does
03:05
clear title mean and why is it important
03:07
for the recovery process
03:09
sure clear title usually what you're
03:11
talking about
03:12
is does somebody have a right to live in
03:14
a home
03:15
or we're talking post disaster do they
03:18
have the right to repair that home
03:20
so our clients come to us after a
03:21
disaster they've been through a serious
03:24
trama
03:25
they're displaced they have no access
03:27
possibly to
03:29
a roof over their head technology
03:31
internet
03:32
pictures important documents i mean they
03:34
are at the worst
03:35
that you can imagine okay so they're
03:37
trying to access direct services either
03:40
financial assistance to literally help
03:42
them get back into their home repair
03:43
their home
03:44
qualify for a new home and at the heart
03:47
of most of their legal issues that they
03:49
come to us
03:49
is a title issue do they
03:52
own their home can they prove their home
03:55
and most people asking them those
03:56
questions are going to say
03:57
do you have a deed to your home most of
04:00
our clients do not have a deed
04:01
did you inherit it through probate has a
04:03
will been probated
04:05
a lot of our clients there's been a lot
04:06
of informal transfers they've maybe
04:08
bought a property and
04:09
never even considered that there needed
04:11
to be deed work closing
04:12
title documents regionally some of
04:15
our clients might live in a recreational
04:17
vehicle down on the coast
04:18
such as you know the rock port aransas
04:20
pass area and we'll talk about that a
04:22
little bit later but you know different
04:23
types of housing for our clients has
04:25
different types of requirements a
04:26
manufactured home
04:27
statement of ownership is different than
04:29
a recreational title vehicle
04:31
versus a site built home with a
04:32
traditional deed so when we talk about
04:34
title
04:35
what we're really talking about is in
04:36
order for our clients to get financial
04:38
assistance or repair assistance or
04:40
furnishings or clothing they have to be
04:42
able to show that they have a right
04:44
to live in that home and some kind of
04:46
ownership proof of ownership why why are
04:48
we going to put money into a home if you
04:49
don't own it or it
04:50
can be foreclosed or it can be taken
04:51
from you or somebody else can
04:54
claim ownership to that property so
04:55
that's what we're talking about we talk
04:56
about title and it might be like i said
04:58
different forms
04:59
but ultimately the gold standard would
05:00
be a deed and then all the different
05:02
ways to get around that
05:04
alternate ways to prove ownership
05:06
interest
05:08
okay you said most of our clients
05:11
have not done any sort of probate
05:12
process because they usually have to
05:14
have a lawyer for that and
05:16
our clients are very limited on their
05:17
income just for our pro bono attorneys
05:20
out there
05:20
do you have to probate the estate to get
05:22
the house transferred into their name
05:24
no not necessarily there's several
05:26
different ways depending on the client
05:27
situation and what they have
05:29
going on it could be something and
05:32
different programs have different
05:33
requirements it could be something as
05:35
simple as an affidavit of heirship
05:37
something that might take a few hours a
05:39
few days the attorney needs to
05:41
act as an investigator a detective get a
05:44
really clear family history
05:46
sometimes filing that affidavit of
05:48
heirship in the real property records in
05:49
the county where the property is located
05:51
and showing that our client has an
05:53
inheritance interest even if it's
05:55
fractional might be enough to qualify
05:57
them for some programs
05:59
obviously the the title is not clear
06:02
at that point we are just showing that
06:03
our clients have an interest in the home
06:05
the property
06:07
ideally you would want to then follow
06:08
that up with gift deeds whether it makes
06:10
our client
06:11
a 25 owner 50 owner you know again the
06:14
gold standard would be getting them to
06:15
be a 100
06:16
owner but it could be something as
06:18
simple as an affidavit of heirship
06:20
if an affidavit of heirship doesn't work
06:23
you would move on to different
06:24
forms that could get more complex and
06:26
lengthy pablo do you have a question
06:28
do you want to interject oh wow that
06:29
sounds like a teacher there thank you
06:30
yeah i just kind of wanted to prompt you
06:32
here on the video but thank you
06:34
You know
06:34
dina i was just wanted to say this
06:35
because actually i forgot that you know
06:37
to mention that our audience might
06:38
include law students and even law
06:39
professors
06:40
and these projects as you mentioned
06:43
them
06:43
they're probably good ones to have law
06:45
students work on like you know
06:47
on a spring break winter break or summer
06:49
break because there's extent they're
06:50
they're compact they can be done in a
06:52
week or so and i wanted to make sure
06:53
that people knew
06:54
about that yeah that's a really good
06:56
point pablo we've had
06:58
i've personally had assistance from st
07:00
mary's texas tech smu school of law
07:03
law students have been very very helpful
07:05
when they're doing especially their you
07:07
know their clinic practice experience
07:09
it gives them
07:10
real clients real important issues to
07:12
work on so those are
07:13
perfect for law students they can get
07:15
practice interviewing clients
07:17
gathering facts a lot of times when
07:20
you're talking about clearing title
07:22
it's as if you're building a flow chart
07:24
you're looking at property that might
07:26
have you know originated with title back
07:28
in the 1940s 1930s
07:30
and then you're stepping through the
07:31
present day where has it been
07:34
who's it gone to who should have it now
07:36
or or in our case
07:37
how is it now our clients how you know
07:39
they've lived there for all these years
07:40
how can we prove that you know they
07:41
deserve
07:42
the financial assistance or the repair
07:44
assistance because they actually are the
07:46
true owners of the home and how can we
07:47
get that
07:48
you know to match up in a chain of
07:50
title but those are great
07:51
great cases for law students to help us
07:53
with and they do and some of the laws
07:54
clinics you know take on a little bit
07:56
more complex cases with
07:58
with the attorneys supervising or with
07:59
their clinical professors supervising so
08:01
we're always happy to have them
08:04
thanks
belinda did you want me to
08:08
talk about some other types of clearing
08:09
title or what you want me to talk about
08:12
well actually i just want to get started
08:14
on the process of the affidavit heirship
08:16
i know
08:17
even some of our estate attorneys out
08:18
there may not be familiar with that
08:20
document i know i wasn't when i started
08:22
at lone star kind of just walk through what
08:24
an affidavit of heirship
08:25
is yeah if you're going to use an
08:27
affidavit of heirship to show an
08:29
inheritance interest from
08:30
for one of our clients like i said
08:32
you're going to have to gather
08:34
complete family history because what
08:36
we're what you're trying to do
08:38
without the actual judicial process
08:40
and we can talk about that in a second
08:42
too
08:42
is you're actually trying to show you
08:44
know who has a claim on the property
08:46
and what you're trying to do is you're
08:47
trying to prevent anybody
08:50
other than our client and the known
08:51
heirs to having a claim that's what's
08:53
going to prevent them from you know
08:54
getting the direct assistance
08:55
so you're going to get a complete family
08:57
history you're normally only going to
08:59
use an affidavit of heirship if it
09:01
if it is real property only if the
09:03
client has
09:04
you know bank accounts they don't have
09:06
payable upon death or beneficiary
09:08
designations
09:09
you wouldn't want to use it for that if
09:10
the client has outstanding debts and
09:12
there's potentially liens
09:14
you can't use it because there would
09:16
need to be an inventory done
09:17
in a court so that you know it doesn't
09:20
look like you're trying to dodge
09:21
creditors or anything like that if the
09:24
decedent owned the property had
09:26
received medicaid and there might be a
09:28
medicaid estate recovery claim
09:30
you can't use it for that so sometimes
09:32
it's really just if there's
09:33
you know one property at issue we know
09:37
who the heirs were who the family
09:38
members were we have prepared affidavits
09:41
of heirship for
09:42
non-family member transactions before
09:44
gotten in touch with with you know
09:46
people that aren't our clients say you
09:48
know in order to clear this property for
09:49
a client
09:50
we need to do an affidavit of heirship
09:51
for your mother would you be willing
09:53
to cooperate and we've had people have
09:55
said absolutely you know i know that my
09:56
mother sold that property without a deed
09:58
many years ago
09:59
we never probated her will you know so
10:02
so sometimes it's not necessarily your
10:04
clients family members other other
10:05
people in the chain they're going to get
10:06
our clients where they need to be
10:08
but you put together the family history
10:10
you have to have a really good legal
10:11
description
10:12
so you know it's not just the the
10:14
address you know
10:15
107 smith street it has to be the actual
10:18
legal description
10:19
that at some point has had a survey done
10:22
so you're going to want to have to do
10:23
you know i do a lot of digging around in
10:24
the cad
10:25
tax assessor records many of our
10:28
paralegals are wonderful they will go
10:29
down
10:30
in person to the county clerk's offices
10:32
we have working relationships with the
10:33
county clerks to pull those deeds for us
10:35
and you're basically doing a title
10:38
search
10:39
on your own you feel pretty good about
10:40
you've looked at all the various owners
10:43
up the chain to make sure you have a
10:44
really good
10:46
legal description the affidavit of
10:48
heirship is worthless if you're not
10:49
actually describing the property
10:51
that you're trying to get the client
10:53
title to so you have to have a good
10:54
legal description and then you have to
10:56
go through the marital history of all
10:57
the parties involved
10:59
were they married how long were they
11:00
married did somebody pre-decease
11:02
somebody did they remarry
11:04
did they have children in this marriage
11:06
do they have children in that marriage i
11:08
mean it's a very
11:09
you know detail-oriented process as
11:12
far as
11:13
you have to really show point a to point
11:15
b of who has ownership of that property
11:17
if somebody's passed away do their
11:20
children now have an inheritance
11:21
interest you know it's not uncommon for
11:23
our clients
11:24
to own property with a couple of
11:25
generations below them because
11:27
siblings have passed away and had had
11:29
children if there's not a will you know
11:30
it's just going to keep on going down
11:32
and
11:32
into the intestate statutes but
11:36
you gather up all that information and
11:38
the client has to be able to swear that
11:40
yes this is correct there are no debts
11:42
there's no medicaid recovery claim
11:45
11:45
as a point of practice i mean we ask our
11:48
clients to gather all that information
11:49
for us
11:50
and we we have to actually also
11:53
11:54
show you know feel good about it
11:56
ourselves before we help them execute
11:57
these documents
11:58
that the information is correct so we
11:59
will send out notices to
12:02
you know medicaid estate recovery plan
12:04
hms is the contractor in austin and say
12:07
this is the decedent this is your social
12:08
security number this is their date of
12:10
death are there any outstanding claims
12:12
there is an outstanding claim can we get
12:15
the claim cleared up
12:16
can we get them an exemption so that we
12:18
can move forward with the affidavit of
12:20
heirship or are we going to have to look
12:21
at a different probate process
12:23
we gather all that up in a document and
12:25
then the client is responsible for
12:27
finding
12:27
two disinterested witnesses two people
12:30
that are not going to inherit or have a
12:31
claim on that property
12:33
that don't have any kind of reason why
12:35
they might be dishonest
12:37
in executing this affidavit so you're
12:40
going to have one main
12:41
affine and then you're going to have a
12:42
corroborating affidavit to go with it so
12:44
that's what satisfies
12:46
you know the county clerk's standards
12:47
and the statutory standards of okay we
12:49
now have two disinterested people that
12:51
signed off and said i knew this person
12:53
for this long i'm familiar with their
12:55
marital history i'm familiar with who
12:56
their children are i'm familiar with the
12:58
property
12:58
and yes this person that you're saying
13:00
inherited a quarter interest or 100
13:02
interest it this is all true and correct
13:04
you file that at the real property
13:06
records and then once that's filed
13:09
it sits there uninterrupted for several
13:10
years i mean it's it's good for
13:13
underwriting attorneys if there's
13:15
subsequent real estate transactions
13:17
a lot of times our clients might come to
13:19
us after a disaster and say i've been in
13:20
this house 40 years
13:22
i don't want to be flooded again i'm
13:24
getting bought out i want to sell it
13:26
and they come to us when they're already
13:27
in the closing process and the
13:28
underwriting attorneys
13:30
at the title company have said hey
13:32
there's a gap
13:33
in chain and title we're going to need
13:34
you to go ahead and execute this
13:35
document
13:36
they might have a form already they
13:38
might want us to use a different form so
13:39
our clients will come to us at that
13:40
point we'll say sure
13:41
let's clear up the chain so you can go
13:43
ahead and either you know
13:45
sell it in the buyout program or sell it
13:47
to a private party or you know
13:48
sell it to a realtor or something like
13:50
that so they might come to us at
13:52
different times usually it's you know
13:53
post-disaster
13:54
and they want that direct financial
13:56
assistance please help me show ownership
13:58
nobody had a will and again it's if you
14:00
didn't have a will
14:02
and there's no debts one piece of
14:04
property is what we're talking about
14:05
so stuart did you have a
14:09
question yeah you spoke we spoke
14:12
yesterday and you spoke about how
14:14
there may be a misconception among the
14:16
private bar or maybe
14:18
some malincentives that
14:21
can can maybe make some attorneys
14:24
want to drag things out
14:25
but can you speak to like how
14:28
quick this process might be and and and
14:31
compare the process of affidavit of
14:33
heirship versus
14:34
a typical administration and in the
14:37
benefits of that for
14:38
our client base and when you're talking
14:40
about
14:41
all of this in the context of
14:44
post-disaster
14:45
that puts a sense of urgency on things
14:48
that
14:48
normally wouldn't exist the only
14:51
other time you kind of see that sense of
14:52
urgency is like i said when somebody's
14:54
already in the closing process
14:55
and they're not wanting to miss out on a
14:57
sale they they're really excited about
14:58
that sale you know if you weren't
15:00
post that post disaster but when you are
15:03
when you are considering the fact that
15:05
there are limited resources either at
15:07
the federal level
15:08
state level or or you know private
15:10
donor dollars
15:11
you know our clients are lining up and
15:12
they're competing for those dollars
15:14
so there's a sense of urgency to get
15:16
these documents done as quickly as
15:17
possible
15:18
for some programs if they will and
15:21
that's always
15:22
the starting point what program is your
15:24
client trying to qualify for
15:26
if it's FEMA money that's a little bit
15:28
different than you know a brand new home
15:30
with a
15:31
private donor maybe with money from you
15:33
know
15:34
rebuild texas or something like that or
15:37
you know mennonites disaster services
15:38
out of ohio so first of all you're going
15:40
to look and see
15:41
what kind of assistance your clients
15:43
applying for and then what will be
15:44
accepted if an
15:45
affidavit of heirship will be accepted
15:47
with a fractional ownership interest and
15:49
there's heirs that would be willing to
15:51
Gift deed the portion and make our client the
15:53
100% owner
15:54
the affidavit of heirship if you can get
15:56
a
15:56
15:57
good legal description and get a good
15:59
family history i mean you could wrap
16:00
that up within
16:02
a week two weeks you know if the
16:04
information's there
16:06
if the client has the information
16:07
readily available if clients don't
16:10
have the information readily available
16:11
and you have to do some digging around
16:12
through public records
16:14
you know it could maybe stretch out
16:15
closer to 30 days but
16:18
in the back of your mind you're knowing
16:19
that there's a deadline that there's
16:21
some
16:22
resources that they don't want to go to
16:23
the back of a wait list
16:25
or that you know literally there's a
16:27
construction crew at their home
16:29
and if they can show this affidavit of
16:30
heirship and show that they have some
16:32
kind of right in that home
16:33
then they can go ahead and get started
16:35
on repairs and whatnot so if
16:37
if we had any private attorneys
16:39
wanting to help with some of these cases
16:40
there are affidavit of heirship cases
16:42
that can be done relatively quickly
16:44
and put our clients in a in an excellent
16:46
position
16:47
with what we some of us would consider a
16:49
relatively simple document but for our
16:50
clients it's really not we just have to
16:52
step them through the process
16:53
help them get it executed and whatnot
16:55
some of our cases are a little bit more
16:57
complicated they might require
16:58
you know say there is a will say there
17:00
is some debt there's some other assets
17:02
you know muniment of title i've
17:05
done
17:06
relatively straightforward probate cases
17:09
in in as little as
17:10
30 days maybe 45 days and that's just a
17:12
docketing issue you know there's
17:14
there's requirements to how long you
17:15
know the notice has to sit at the at the
17:17
county courthouse and then as soon as
17:19
you can get in
17:20
and you will notice i think pablo could
17:23
speak to this too is just you know after
17:24
a disaster the counties
17:26
a lot of our county clerks were
17:27
devastated through the disaster
17:29
but even so they were so accommodating
17:31
to our clients because we're all in it
17:33
together i had damage to my private law
17:34
firm before i
17:35
you know joined trla my parents house
17:38
was heavily damaged
17:40
the county clerk herself might you know
17:43
be living in an rv because her house was
17:44
damaged so i mean
17:45
really the courts kept trying to keep
17:46
moving like they are through COVID what
17:48
can we do
17:49
to you know ensure access to justice and
17:51
and how can we get people in so you will
17:52
find that the county clerks and the
17:53
county judges district courts everybody
17:55
after disaster
17:56
really does try to move these matters
17:58
along so you know if it wasn't disaster
18:01
based things might drag out a little bit
18:02
longer but i found that they've kind of
18:03
let me go to the front of the line
18:05
and some of the state agencies will put
18:06
our clients at the forefront
18:09
so that we can move things as quickly
18:11
as possible so
18:15
and dina actually there's a
18:17
commentary that you
18:18
will mention once in a while here you
18:20
know in the podcast that
18:22
part of the recovery process involves
18:24
the attorneys and
18:25
those of us you know those who might be
18:27
listening to the pro bono side
18:29
they always kind of what i want to
18:30
Volunteer when i put their names forward and
18:31
we want to do these podcasts on this
18:32
website so you know you can choose a
18:34
place where you'll be comfortable doing
18:35
this work but
18:36
if you get a case and it's complicated
18:38
on the probate matter
18:39
we assure our pro bonos i'm sure you can
18:41
add to this that we provide them
18:42
resources and answer questions
18:44
if they have any
absolutely anytime we
18:46
have somebody who's willing to take on a
18:48
case i try to give them
18:49
as much information on the front end as
18:51
possible so that can give them an
18:52
informed decision is this the case that
18:54
they can fit into their current case
18:55
load
18:56
do they feel comfortable professionally
18:58
and ethically handling it
19:00
i try to give them the good bad and ugly
19:02
and then obviously i want
19:04
them to know why it's so important to
19:06
the client if if you can't take this
19:08
case on my caseload
19:10
might not you know allow me to take it
19:12
and they're gonna
19:13
they're gonna miss out on a new home
19:15
they're gonna miss out on repairs
19:16
they've been living in a at a
19:18
you know third world conditions for
19:20
three years since harvey you know
19:21
there's always the humanitarian
19:23
aspect to it but i always want the
19:26
lawyers to feel comfortable that are
19:27
volunteering with us and for me i
19:29
i'm forever trying to recruit people
19:31
here locally well i work in very small
19:33
counties very small towns these are
19:34
people that my kids go to school with
19:37
people that i see every day so i'm
19:38
certainly not wanting to hide the ball
19:41
and anything with a case i'll tell them
19:42
hey not all of our cases are pretty
19:44
they're complex but i mean we're lawyers
19:45
that's what we do
19:46
disaster work probate work there's
19:48
trauma there's death
19:49
you know there's always going to be
19:51
twists and turns and whatnot but i know
19:52
that when we place cases we absolutely
19:54
try to
19:55
give them everything they need to know
19:56
in any kind of support call me if you
19:58
need help get in touch with the client
19:59
you need me to
20:00
facilitate getting documents you need me
20:02
to text
20:04
you know whatever obviously things are a
20:05
little bit different with COVID and how
20:07
we handle some of those
20:08
interactions with our clients we've
20:10
all had to learn how to do everything
20:11
remotely
20:12
but we're always there to offer this
20:13
support and i've
20:15
had several cases that have been placed
20:17
recently and it just always makes me
20:18
really happy to know
20:20
that there's you know there's volunteer
20:21
attorneys out there willing to take
20:22
cases on for us because these are
20:23
clients that might not otherwise have
20:25
had help in these title cases it
20:28
literally
20:28
can mean the difference between a roof
20:31
over your head or
20:32
some of our clients have brand new
20:36
beautiful up-to-date up-to-code homes
20:38
that they've never lived in
20:39
ever there's a neighborhood
20:42
in victoria county the long-term
20:44
recovery group put together
20:46
a neighborhood with a bunch of different
20:47
funders and community partners and they
20:50
built 40
20:51
brand new homes for harvey survivors
20:53
these are
20:54
beautiful homes ada compliant and
20:57
and for our clients you know we probably
20:59
have about
21:00
10 or 15 clients in those homes title
21:03
work was the difference between them
21:05
getting a new home or not
21:06
then some of them being homeless or not
21:08
are some of them living on a family
21:09
member's couch for
21:10
another two years or not so that's
21:12
that's how serious the title work
21:14
is and so i mean i always think that's a
21:15
really good feel good
21:17
point you know if the attorneys need any
21:18
extra motivation for taking a case
21:20
really a couple hours days maybe a month
21:24
out of your
21:24
practice you know putting it in with
21:25
your other cases and clients i mean the
21:27
trade-off
21:28
of knowing that the good work that
21:29
you're doing and how serious it is and
21:30
how you know how much it
21:32
assists our clients always think is a
21:33
good good reminder
21:37
and that is a good reminder because for a lot of our
21:39
clients being able to come to us
21:41
is life-changing for them
21:45
just earlier on you did mention a small
21:47
estate affidavit and a muniment of
21:49
title
21:50
could you just go into you know
21:52
briefly a little bit of
21:53
the difference between them sure once
21:56
you move on past affidavits of heirship
21:58
you know before any of the probate work
22:01
it
22:01
still could be as simple as a deed we
22:04
have one client
22:06
you know that maybe they know who the
22:08
owner is and the owner's willing to deed
22:10
over the house and there is
22:11
no probate work that needs to be done
22:13
you know it's a it's a family member so
22:14
in a family member situation it might
22:16
just be a gift deed
22:17
between family members it might be a
22:19
non-family situation where it's a
22:21
special warranty deed so
22:23
so outside of any and all probate
22:24
matters it could be as simple as
22:26
preparing a deed and transferring that
22:29
interest over i've had some that are
22:30
that simple
22:32
i don't often use
22:36
small estate affidavits
22:39
they just don't ever really seem to
22:41
cover
22:42
what we need them to cover you know so
22:46
so i can't really speak to those too
22:47
much it's just whenever you go through
22:49
the uh
22:49
the different flow chart of the the
22:51
various things that have to do with
22:53
title
22:53
small estate affidavits are
22:55
just not necessarily ever going to get
22:57
you there in my opinion they might work
22:59
for other people for other reasons maybe
23:00
to get
23:01
some money out of a bank account but
23:03
when it comes to title i i
23:04
i don't even consider them most the time
23:07
because that's not what our clients need
23:09
moving on into something
23:12
different you might uh
23:16
you know we talked earlier about RVs and
23:18
manufactured homes
23:20
it might not be a probate process it
23:22
might not be
23:23
that it might be something that's titled
23:24
more closely to either a
23:26
car title is which recreational vehicles
23:28
RVs are titled as
23:30
so you're looking at going through the
23:31
process as if you were trying to clear
23:33
up title
23:34
to you know the car you drive if it's
23:37
been financed
23:38
you know it has to be paid off because
23:40
the bank's holding holding the title
23:41
like it would be a car if you had
23:42
financed a car through a lien holder
23:44
it might only be salvage title
23:47
because you know there's no way that it
23:48
could be repaired or it's too old
23:50
that's if you're talking about
23:51
recreational vehicles the title work
23:52
that you would do for recreational
23:54
vehicles is like what you would do for
23:55
an automobile
23:56
tax assessor office in your county would
23:59
be the ones that you know have those
24:00
forms and it's still
24:02
gathering information talking to who had
24:03
the title what we find for our clients
24:05
sometimes
24:06
is they have been they've been had a
24:10
lot of times they're desperate
24:12
they need a roof over their heads they
24:14
buy something that seemed like a good
24:15
deal at the time
24:17
and somebody tells them i'll give you
24:18
title you know
24:20
when i deliver it oh i don't have it
24:21
with me i don't have it or they have
24:23
title that hasn't been
24:24
properly transferred in about two or
24:26
three transactions or they might have
24:28
bought and sold it without a title
24:29
you know and people sometimes they know
24:32
better and sometimes they don't but when
24:33
you're talking about a roof over your
24:34
head versus a piece of paper at the time
24:37
it doesn't seem that important post
24:39
disaster that's when the sense of
24:40
urgency comes in if now you don't have
24:42
that document that you need to show
24:43
somebody to get assistance so
24:45
you have that and then when you're
24:46
talking about manufacturing homes
24:48
statement of ownership so again
24:50
manufacturing homes might be bought and
24:52
sold several times and nobody ever had
24:54
the correct documentation or the home is
24:56
so old and the documentation that was
24:58
required in the 70s
24:59
is not what's required now that's a
25:02
really
25:03
sometimes that can be a really quick
25:05
process it can be a matter of i had a
25:06
contract for deed i had a bill a sale
25:10
i execute an affidavit on behalf of my
25:12
client they tell me the facts
25:14
you know we get a letter or a signature
25:16
from the seller
25:17
i mean that can be a really quick
25:18
process that all goes through the texas
25:20
department of housing and community
25:21
affairs
25:22
manufactured housing divisions a very
25:24
long acronym
25:25
tdhca mhd in austin
25:29
they've been for our harvey clients
25:31
they've been wonderful to work with
25:33
they've pushed our applications for
25:35
title up to the front
25:36
fees were waived after harvey you
25:39
know if you're
25:40
if your client's a harvey survivor you
25:42
can ask for those fees to be waived
25:44
again that's allowing the attorney or
25:47
the advocates and especially pablo now
25:48
we're talking about earlier
25:50
law students it gives them a chance to
25:52
do a you know a really thorough
25:54
investigation
25:55
who owned the home where was the home
25:57
located when was the home moved
25:59
and then putting together those
26:00
affidavits and all of that documentation
26:03
you can't find the seller the seller
26:04
doesn't want to sign off on it for
26:06
whatever reason because they feel guilty
26:08
because they never had clear title you
26:10
send certified letters you send proof
26:12
that you mailed those certified letters
26:13
if you can build your paper trail
26:15
that is enough i mean i've had clients
26:18
be awarded title
26:19
when the sellers were in absolute
26:21
opposition but we could prove that our
26:22
client
26:23
had bought the home they had a receipt
26:25
for every payment over the past
26:26
four years and and they had a right to
26:28
the home and again it's
26:30
that sense of urgency after a disaster
26:33
our clients waiting for repairs
26:35
the roof is ripped off they need to redo
26:37
the electrical and they don't have the
26:39
money for those repairs there's somebody
26:41
willing to pay for it for them if it's
26:42
not FEMA than a volunteer group
26:44
but you have to have that piece of paper
26:46
in hand saying i have a right to be in
26:48
this house
26:49
i own this house any money that you put
26:51
into this house is going to benefit me
26:53
and i'm you know i'm here legally and
26:54
lawfully so
26:56
you know you go back to probate
26:58
procedures muniment of title if you're
27:01
doing
27:01
a type of you know judicial probate
27:04
that's going to be your quickest
27:06
quickest one you know you don't have to
27:07
do an inventory all you're talking about
27:09
is just
27:10
when you offer a will for probate as a
27:12
Muniment of title it literally is
27:14
just a transfer title to that real
27:16
property there's
27:17
nothing else going on that needs
27:18
administering okay so those are going to
27:20
move through pretty quickly
27:22
there might be a will with other assets
27:24
you're looking at if every if the
27:26
will's been
27:27
executed correctly if it's been you know
27:29
self-proved by affidavits and you're
27:31
looking at independent administration
27:34
that drags out a little bit longer but
27:37
an independent administration with a
27:39
will
27:41
with you know everything you know
27:43
meeting all the statutory requirements
27:45
that is not necessarily a hard process
27:47
so for any of the
27:48
volunteer attorneys that do regular
27:50
probate work you know
27:52
they might do contested probate
27:54
litigation and
27:56
an independent administration for one of
27:57
our clients for a relatively
27:58
straightforward will
27:59
would be something that you know probate
28:01
attorneys could move through rather
28:03
quickly
28:04
it might be you know a welcome
28:06
respite from some of their other more
28:08
difficult cases
28:09
and then knowing that it's going to have
28:10
such a big payoff for our clients
28:12
you know sometimes it's just a matter
28:15
of of
28:16
you know walking into court with them
28:18
showing up doing the inventory doing
28:20
that you know
28:21
be willing to put your name on it
28:22
willing to put yourself on the line and
28:24
help the client through it
28:25
for probate attorneys that are just
28:28
starting out again like pablo
28:30
talked about earlier i mean we'd offer
28:31
them the support if you've probated
28:34
one will
28:34
you've probated ten wills they can be
28:37
very complicated they can be very
28:39
simple i mean it just really depends
28:41
but you know if you have the support
28:42
there it's something that
28:44
probate is one of those areas
28:46
that eventually somebody's gonna
28:48
somebody's gonna come up against a
28:49
probate case i mean we all die it's like
28:51
death and taxes i mean there's gonna be
28:53
wills there's gonna be probate you
28:55
know i think any attorney
28:57
eventually would you know even just for
28:59
their own knowledge
29:01
give a probate case a try i mean it's
29:03
going to be a part of everybody's life
29:04
at some point
29:06
and then if you're talking about
29:07
something more complicated
29:10
we can't do an affidavit of heirship
29:11
there was no will but we still need to
29:13
determine who the heirs were you're
29:15
looking at an application to determine
29:17
heirship an actual
29:18
you know court court ordered
29:21
determination of who the heirs are and
29:23
then the heirs can get together and
29:24
there's something in the estates code
29:26
that allows you to do an independent
29:27
administration
29:29
by agreement of the heirs so we don't
29:31
have to do this big long complicated
29:32
drawn out expensive
29:34
dependent administration if the heirs
29:35
can get together
29:37
they can ask the court for that
29:38
independent court created independent
29:41
administration
29:42
sometimes when we're working with a
29:44
client and there's fractional owners
29:46
there might have been bad blood between
29:48
family members or different generations
29:51
but once the attorneys talk to some of
29:53
the co-owners and say look
29:56
this family member of yours has lived in
29:57
this home for many years
29:59
they've paid the taxes they've paid
30:01
upkeep
30:02
they've done all these things to this
30:03
home you're still a fractional owner
30:06
and if this home has repairs done to it
30:08
or if it's brought up to code
30:10
you know your asset is appreciating also
30:12
your 25%
30:14
interest is now going to be worth more
30:16
so sometimes it just takes explaining
30:18
people to them look nobody's trying to
30:19
take the house from you if you don't
30:20
want to deed your portion over
30:21
if you want to keep your 25% that's fine
30:23
you you let her live there all these
30:25
years
30:26
you know you can and most people with a
30:28
fractional interest it's usually the
30:29
person our client that's living in the
30:30
home that has paid
30:32
for everything you know nobody else has
30:33
ever contributed to
30:35
property taxes or upkeep but when you
30:37
talk to the other heirs sometimes they
30:38
will get on board okay i'll
30:40
sign off on this affidavit or i'll sign
30:42
off on this gift you know it seems right
30:45
or hey that's fine i'm not going to
30:46
contest independent administration by
30:48
agreement because ultimately
30:50
if the home is being repaired their
30:53
asset is appreciating no matter what
30:54
what portion they own of it so
30:58
yeah i've had to explain that to a
31:00
couple people it's like if she never
31:01
gets
31:02
he or she never gets the recovery funds
31:03
to repair the house
31:05
It’s either they're going to be sold to a
31:07
house flipper or the city's just going
31:09
to
31:09
probably demolish it or buy it out
31:11
exactly you've got nothing
31:13
yeah nobody wins if we don't kind of
31:15
work together to try to do what we can
31:16
you're right to improve the home
31:19
absolutely
31:22
and just a bit back on manufactured
31:25
homes
31:26
a lot of our clients live in trailers
31:30
RVs
31:31
other similar things and
31:34
that's a big part i know that may sound
31:36
a little scary for some of our attorneys
31:38
out there i know when i first came to
31:40
lone star
31:41
they were like you have to transfer
31:42
title for a trailer i'm like uh what
31:45
and then having to learn the very basics
31:47
of yeah they don't exactly
31:49
have a title it's this whole different
31:51
process
31:52
but yeah thankfully yeah
31:56
my department was great in helping me
31:57
through that giving me the information
32:00
hooking me up to the tdhca website
32:03
which is wonderful because you can find
32:05
the application what qualifies for a
32:07
Bill of sale
32:08
where to find the texas seal yes i've
32:12
crawled under a couple of trailer homes
32:14
to find that seal
32:15
i i have been known to have my cell
32:17
phone out taking pictures
32:18
all over places under the under the sink
32:22
in the closet electrical box
32:25
i think i think it's a rite of passage
32:27
for all legal aid attorneys to look for
32:29
that seal or that you know
32:30
serial id for whether it be for a
32:32
divorce or transfer or something you've
32:33
got to do it in a mobile home
32:35
i know exactly where they're where to look
32:36
It usually requires me also petting a dog
32:38
saying it's okay
32:40
i can be here don't bite me it's fine
32:44
i have i have permission to be here yeah
32:46
been there too
32:48
absolutely now that website that website
32:50
is is fabulous it's very helpful
32:53
and sometimes if we can't place a case
32:55
with a volunteer attorney
32:57
or you know we are unable to take the
33:00
case on for various reasons say that you
33:01
know the client doesn't qualify
33:03
financially or whatnot
33:04
that website is really chock full with a
33:07
lot of self-help if somebody doesn't
33:08
have a complicated matter and or they
33:10
have somebody else to step them through
33:11
it
33:11
everything that anybody would need or
33:13
you know if we have volunteer attorneys
33:15
right now listening that
33:16
that somebody walks in their office next
33:18
week and says hey i really need help
33:19
transfer and title my manufactured home
33:22
i'm in line for us they might not have
33:23
even ever called us and become one of
33:25
our clients and maybe those attorneys
33:26
would feel comfortable going to that
33:27
website
33:28
taking a look at it i mean everything
33:32
you could possibly need is there
33:33
the applications the affidavits you can
33:35
search for existing tax liens you know
33:37
you have to make sure all those liens
33:38
are cleared up or somebody else that's
33:40
responsible has paid them
33:42
so the title can be transferred
33:45
if you email them they'll email you
33:48
right back
33:49
if you call them they'll call you right
33:50
back i've worked with the same
33:53
person there for the past three years
33:55
they will email me or call me right away
33:56
and
33:57
and i have not run into an issue yet
34:00
where they
34:01
they're not putting up any resistance
34:03
they're saying this is what i need in
34:04
order to help your client if you can get
34:06
me this document if you can
34:08
fill this gap of information if you can
34:11
do this and they will tell you they send
34:12
out what they call
34:13
r a i's request for additional
34:16
information
34:17
they will spell it out very clearly to
34:19
you and your client
34:21
we need this one additional thing we
34:23
need this covered and it's usually in
34:25
the form of an affidavit
34:26
so you draft that affidavit for your
34:28
client you know hey read over this
34:30
is this what you want to say is this the
34:31
truth you're signing this
34:33
and and you know it can be that simple
34:35
34:36
you know it it those kind of cases the
34:40
more you do them
34:41
it's i would never call them easy cases
34:44
but it gets a little bit easier you get
34:45
a little bit more comfortable
34:47
you kind of learn the tricks you get a
34:48
process of
34:50
you know you have all your documents
34:51
gathered up and you know what goes out
34:53
and what chronological order and what
34:55
you have to have in order to do that
34:56
we do have so many of our clients that
34:58
live in manufactured homes you know some
34:59
of the things we're talking about
35:00
title we talk about it in the context of
35:04
you know direct assistance after
35:06
disaster they need money for repairs
35:09
but some of the side issues of not
35:11
having title for our clients that live
35:13
in manufactured homes you know i've
35:15
mentioned we were speaking yesterday
35:16
about the risk of eviction
35:18
okay so we have a disaster survivor
35:21
their home is in you know bad shape
35:25
they don't have money for repairs
35:26
they're trying to get FEMA to assist
35:28
them so we have we have that
35:30
part of it but then we have a seller or
35:33
maybe a landlord
35:34
in a contract you know i'd say contract
35:38
for sale sometimes it's not
35:39
that formal it it could just be a i gave
35:42
you 10 grand five years ago and i'll
35:43
give you another 10 grand and i'll give
35:45
you title or
35:46
our clients have completely paid
35:47
everything and they still haven't ever
35:50
turned over title right so anyway so
35:51
we're at this point it's post disaster
35:54
we have a seller who now has damage to
35:57
their primary residence
35:59
they never insured the manufactured home
36:02
for our client our client never thought
36:03
about it there's never any damage
36:05
so maybe the seller doesn't want to make
36:06
a claim on their insurance
36:08
for what they consider rental property
36:09
or you know a second home or whatever
36:11
that they've technically
36:12
sold to our client or they've had so
36:14
much damage to their home the seller has
36:16
so much damage in their home they don't
36:17
have any extra cash to put towards
36:19
making repairs on something that they
36:21
they haven't want to let title or
36:24
ownership go of yet but they certainly
36:26
don't want to put money into it you know
36:28
that's not my house after all so that
36:29
kind of thing so what i have run into
36:31
with some of my clients is we talk about
36:33
the risk of eviction
36:34
and we're talking about and this is
36:36
going to sound it's an ugly word but
36:38
we're talking about extortion
36:39
we're talking about clients who are this
36:41
close to paying something off
36:43
or it has been paid off disaster hits
36:46
they go to the seller hey i need you to
36:47
sign this application for transfer
36:49
statement of ownership
36:50
and the seller for whatever reason
36:54
especially after disaster says no you
36:55
owe me another five grand
36:57
you owe me another 10 grand i've never
36:59
charged you taxes
37:00
for insurance never part of any kind of
37:03
written
37:04
you know agreement if there was a
37:05
written agreement that wasn't included
37:07
you know so we have had cases where
37:09
clients have been
37:11
threatened with you know eviction pay up
37:14
or get out
37:15
after a disaster there's not really
37:17
anywhere to go
37:18
you know there's not affordable housing
37:20
just readily available in most of these
37:21
areas anyway
37:23
but now we have clients that are
37:24
desperate and they're being
37:26
threatened with eviction
37:27
you know so that that's always an issue
37:29
right there financial exploitation yes
37:31
sir
37:32
oh please don't call me sir most of
37:36
you don't know this actually we're
37:37
watching to see each other in the video
37:38
that's why DINa can see when i'm
37:39
asking the question here but you're only
37:41
hearing the voice cause like i told them
37:42
this is a face for podcasts
37:45
but step back a little bit here do you
37:48
know what you're saying like we are
37:49
showing this or giving this to FEMA
37:51
that literally actually is the FEMA
37:52
appeal within the FEMA appeal is the
37:54
title clearing issue it might be the
37:55
only issue it might be a
37:57
an issue that gets you to the actual
37:59
matter that you're applying for
38:00
but that's what you that's actually
38:02
doing a FEMA appeal to explain to the
38:04
FEMA agency
38:05
the title and why this person owns this
38:07
so they can actually
38:08
absolutely so any of this information
38:10
that you're gathering the clear title
38:12
is also stepping FEMA through it you
38:14
know FEMA
38:15
might deny you because they again
38:18
FEMA or other other agencies anybody is
38:21
always going to say they have it in
38:22
their head
38:23
where's the deed even if it's not a deed
38:25
i don't have a deed to an rv
38:27
i don't have a deed to a manufactured
38:29
home you know what i mean they're always
38:30
going to ask for a deed and so a lot of
38:32
the work that we do as advocates and
38:33
volunteer attorneys would do is
38:35
explaining the difference between no
38:36
there was a will that was probated
38:38
a recreational vehicle is titled like a
38:40
car a manufactured home has a statement
38:42
of ownership there's not a deed but once
38:44
you've gathered all that information up
38:45
yeah if you're helping somebody with a
38:47
denial with FEMA you've put all that
38:49
information together it's going to be
38:50
very similar your affidavit
38:52
you know declaration of FEMA is going to
38:54
look very similar to your
38:55
affidavit statement of facts that goes
38:58
to tdhca
39:00
you know we talk go back to FEMA real
39:03
quick pablo
39:04
uh FEMA has different standards you know
39:07
if we can't give them a traditional deed
39:09
we can maybe show them that affidavit of
39:11
heirship or FEMA has what's called an
39:13
owner-occupied standard
39:15
i don't have a deed i i will have my
39:17
attorney begin on affidavit of heirship
39:19
and that does help our FEMA clients
39:20
quite a bit if we can
39:22
if they can go to FEMA and say look i've
39:24
consulted with this private attorney
39:25
i've consulted with legal aid they're
39:26
working on the title clearing aspect for
39:29
me
39:30
you know for the long run for the next
39:32
disaster you know have everything
39:34
together for that
39:35
but at the time right all i can do is
39:37
own our occupied standard
39:39
so some of the title clearing for us is
39:40
as attorneys that help with FEMA appeals
39:43
it's a matter of showing FEMA that that
39:46
was their residence
39:46
before the disaster they lived there
39:48
when the disaster struck
39:50
their voter registration card matches up
39:52
or their driver's license matches up
39:58
i just know i have a question so
40:01
i have the benefit of being completely
40:03
ignorant about
40:04
all of this and so
40:10
and so i was wondering so i i mean
40:12
just
40:13
to defend myself for just one second
40:15
from my own insult i don't do any of
40:17
this FEMA stuff
40:18
i mean i'm a housing attorney primarily
40:20
so whenever you started talking about
40:21
evictions in mobile homes and
40:23
and RVs that's that piqued my interest
40:25
but i want to back up to
40:27
what pablo was i think you guys both
40:29
touched on this earlier but
40:31
for someone who might be a potential
40:35
volunteer attorney who's never dealt
40:36
with a FEMA case
40:38
can you kind of just walk us through
40:40
the process of what that
40:43
is as truncated as you can make it
40:45
basically is what that might look like
40:46
for a client like from
40:48
from the from the moment of the of the
40:49
disaster to
40:52
assessing the damage to the
40:55
application to FEMA and then the
40:56
potential denial and appeal
40:58
sure sure and know that that's its own
41:01
podcast so pablo gets to find somebody
41:05
to do that podcast because i you know
41:06
you could speak for hours on that for
41:08
sure but
41:08
for the volunteer attorneys that are out
41:10
there listening to it go on and on about
41:11
title clearing and
41:13
and all these different things
41:15
disaster strikes
41:17
there's you know the immediate needs
41:18
after disaster you know
41:20
shelter food water safety your emergency
41:24
managers
41:25
all of your county government people
41:27
there they are in charge of everything
41:28
they've
41:29
controlled the flow of who can come in
41:30
in the county who can go out of the
41:31
county can our clients even get back to
41:33
their home
41:34
or not were we under mandatory
41:35
evacuation what not so
41:38
eventually as it's safe people start
41:40
kind of filing back in
41:43
maybe they never left their house
41:44
they're still in their home FEMA will
41:46
eventually get here
41:47
they will set up a drc a disaster
41:49
recovery center
41:51
regionally there was one located in
41:53
victoria
41:54
to take in all the counties surrounding
41:55
victoria during harvey there was one
41:57
down in
41:58
rockport taking all those coastal bend
42:00
counties so
42:01
FEMA sets up the sba will be there
42:05
there will be disaster volunteer
42:07
attorneys through the aba there's
42:09
there's gonna be a bunch of partners
42:11
there so clients come in and they are
42:13
applying for
42:14
every single you know they're not our
42:15
clients yet they're all they're all
42:16
survivors
42:17
they're coming in they're applying for
42:19
help through the red cross through
42:21
different social services they want
42:23
assistance from FEMA
42:25
you're going to FEMA for assistance
42:27
because your home was not insured
42:30
or it was underinsured for the most of
42:32
the clients that i'm talking about with
42:33
the volunteer attorneys that are helping
42:34
okay or
42:35
sba loans or whatnot it's and it's a
42:37
very long complicated process but i'm
42:38
trying to trying to make it
42:39
as short as possible so you have
42:41
somebody come in
42:43
they apply directly with FEMA they might
42:46
be approved
42:47
on the spot they have everything they
42:48
need but FEMA gives them a very very
42:51
small award that's not going to
42:52
do anything for them so they want to
42:54
appeal that award amount
42:56
or FEMA finds them ineligible because
42:58
they don't have a deed
43:00
a probated will an affidavit of heirship
43:03
so now they're wanting to appeal that
43:05
denial they've been declared ineligible
43:07
for whatever reason
43:08
so volunteer attorneys at that point can
43:11
step
43:12
in and either appeal the award amount or
43:14
appeal the denial
43:16
and again you'll see it all comes back
43:18
to what's considered title
43:20
and and they might have some form of
43:22
title it's just getting
43:23
FEMA to understand where that fits into
43:26
their own regulations and rules
43:28
that yes this is what this means or this
43:29
is what we're talking about
43:31
or they don't have title but
43:35
an attorney has stepped in and you and i
43:37
all know that when a lawyer gets
43:39
involved it's it's
43:40
always better for our clients it is
43:42
always better just to have
43:44
an attorney on their side to help make
43:46
phone calls to help keep them on track
43:47
to help them guide their documents
43:49
in a post-disaster situation we might be
43:51
the only people with internet
43:53
or a cell phone that can help them you
43:55
know do the investigative part of it
43:57
so an attorney steps in and then
44:00
we tell FEMA hey look they've talked to
44:02
an attorney they're working with an
44:03
attorney
44:04
we're getting this under control but in
44:05
the meantime we can prove that that
44:08
was their residence here's the
44:09
documentation
44:11
driver's license voter registration
44:14
utility bills
44:15
they own that home there's that
44:17
owner-occupied status that was talking
44:18
about it's not formal title but it's
44:20
owner-occupied status they've paid
44:22
property taxes for the past
44:24
10 20 30 years we can get you those
44:26
receipts
44:27
they've made maintenance to the home
44:29
they've done all these things that what
44:30
you would consider
44:32
an owner-occupied person would do we
44:34
gather all that documentation
44:36
we put that into an affidavit a
44:38
declaration we send that to FEMA
44:40
so for volunteer attorneys just helping
44:43
your client
44:44
you know pull together all that
44:45
documents you're talking about
44:46
traumatized people
44:48
that you know maybe their entire home
44:49
was destroyed they don't even have a dry
44:51
blanket or a dry
44:52
shirt so when you have an attorney step
44:54
in and we're able to kind of take
44:55
all of that paperwork and just just
44:59
stuff you know the stuff that we're used
45:00
to doing gathering all those documents
45:02
making copies of those documents
45:03
scanning those documents
45:04
putting them in a really concise
45:08
you know order that steps FEMA through
45:10
you know why this person is not
45:12
ineligible
45:13
or why this person deserves a higher
45:15
reward in order to
45:16
assist them in getting back on their
45:18
feet after disaster so an attorney can
45:20
make
45:21
a huge huge difference in those cases
45:23
and i would ask any of the people
45:25
listening
45:25
definitely another disaster strikes
45:28
we know it will
45:29
it's not if it's when if anybody feels
45:31
like taking those cases on i mean FEMA
45:33
you know we all work out of the the same
45:36
set of standards for the individual
45:38
household program every time it gets
45:40
updated you know all the disaster
45:41
attorneys take a look at it i have mine
45:43
heavily
45:44
bookmarked but i mean you see the
45:46
standards you work with some of the same
45:47
types of cases over and over and over i
45:49
mean i
45:49
after harvey we were you know some of us
45:51
were doing 30 of those at a time maybe
45:53
40 of those at a time
45:54
but some of them are very similar so you
45:56
can crank them out but they
45:57
i mean they mean the difference between
45:58
a client having zero dollars and maybe
46:00
clients getting
46:02
ten thousand thirty thousand you know
46:04
there's a max
46:05
to what they can get but i mean it's
46:06
it's life-changing that money that they
46:09
can get and you will see that
46:11
FEMA will not normally grant
46:14
an appeal if there's not somebody
46:17
else involved
46:18
i mean we've had clients that have tried
46:19
to appeal on their own multiple times
46:21
the first time an attorney gets involved
46:23
people take notice and and i'm not
46:25
saying that we have a 100
46:26
recovery rate but we have you know
46:29
been able to have some success for our
46:30
clients and it really make a huge
46:31
difference in their life so yeah i would
46:32
always ask anybody hey
46:34
don't don't let it scare you and you get
46:35
them through the FEMA appeal process
46:37
you give them some money to get started
46:39
well they make the repairs that they can
46:40
make say maybe that initial
46:42
7-10 grand then there's private
46:45
donor money
46:46
so then so my clients that were able to
46:47
repair their home
46:49
i then have them in line for we're going
46:50
to do the title work we're going to get
46:52
you that deed we're going to probate
46:53
that will we're going to do whatever we
46:54
need to get you that statement of
46:55
ownership
46:56
you don't get to apply for a brand new
46:58
home you get to move your entire family
47:00
into a
47:01
brand new home i mean some of my clients
47:03
i stayed with them even when the initial
47:05
was done
47:06
and then they might have had five or six
47:08
shoot-off cases and they might have been
47:09
my client and i'm not
47:10
trying to scare anybody away you know
47:11
longevity but they might have been my
47:13
client for two or three years
47:14
and i saw them from day after harvey
47:18
all the way to now we're we're three
47:21
years in and some of them you know it's
47:22
been a really complete
47:23
complete recovery now those are the
47:25
cases that i like
47:26
working on things as we go with them you
47:29
do see that a lot
47:30
sometimes of most of our clients if they
47:32
have one issue there's usually about two
47:34
or three more in the background they didn’t know they had
47:38
and just do some shameless plugging
47:39
right now if you're
47:41
interested in a more in-depth analysis
47:43
of FEMA and FEMA appeals
47:44
i encourage you to listen to our
47:46
disaster recovery episode with disaster
47:48
attorneys
47:50
chase porter and christina brown awesome
47:53
that's available as well on our hosting
47:55
site buzz sprout
47:56
and we do have copies of the audio
47:59
available
48:00
on the texas disaster legal help website
48:02
in our knowledge resource library
48:04
and that website is
48:09
texasdisasterlegalhelp.simplejustice.org
48:11
and encourage everyone to check it out
48:13
it's an online resource for pro bono
48:15
attorneys
48:15
you sign up to volunteer with us and you
48:18
have access
48:19
to mentorship live chat and a lot of the
48:23
templates like
48:24
we have small estate affidavit templates
48:26
which i agree with
48:27
dina i've never used we have the
48:29
templates for the affidavit of heirship
48:31
we can walk you through a muniment of
48:32
title so
48:34
anyone out there listening and wants to
48:36
help you know
48:38
someone told me once pro bono hours are
48:40
billable hours for the soul and i've
48:42
never forgotten that
48:43
absolutely no truer statement for sure
48:46
when i always tell them what i do for a
48:48
living and say i'm trying to get myself
48:49
out of purgatory as a legal aid attorney
48:55
so let me ask you dina is it your
48:57
experience then i mean because it's this
48:58
is very state specific law right
49:01
probate real estate it's your
49:03
experience and when FEMA then
49:04
sees that an attorney is involved in
49:06
explaining it there's a certain
49:07
deference involved there because
49:09
you practice in the state or are they
49:12
still going to be questioning the law
49:14
itself in the document itself and giving
49:15
you a hard time during the FEMA appeal
49:18
you know not not really i mean if you're
49:21
licensed in that state and in texas is
49:23
such a large state and there are so
49:26
many thousands of people affected by
49:28
harvey
49:29
i mean they really didn't put up a bunch
49:30
of state-specific resistance it was like
49:33
you know this is the law in the state of
49:34
texas these are the documents but
49:37
when an attorney is involved and is able
49:39
to speak with that kind of authority yes
49:40
FEMA does have to take notice because
49:42
we're telling them
49:44
you know look what what worked for you
49:46
on the east coast or in that hurricane
49:48
and what they call it in
49:49
the carolinas is not what we call it
49:52
here it is comparable to what we have
49:54
here and so you know when an attorney's
49:57
involved and they're able to tell the
49:58
people at FEMA that then yes
49:59
FEMA is definitely more receptive and i
50:01
think our clients are ultimately more
50:02
successful
50:03
but i think you know they are willing
50:07
to
50:08
i think they are willing to work with
50:09
the client
50:12
a little bit more whenever there's an
50:13
attorney involved i mean i mean i think
50:14
that's just you know all cases
50:16
period when it comes to pro se versus
50:19
having an attorney involved
50:20
you know they kind of have to follow
50:22
their own rules a little bit more we
50:23
hope that they will but
50:25
i don't find it to be as state specific
50:27
as long as you know your stuff and you
50:28
just tell them no this is what that's
50:29
called here
50:30
and this is what works for title so you
50:32
will and a lot of times you know FEMA
50:34
you know they're going to have their
50:35
volunteer liaisons they're going to be
50:37
really plugged in with the locals you
50:38
know i attended long-term recovery
50:41
meetings daily then weekly now i do it
50:44
you know bi-monthly
50:46
but we're going to have a a county judge
50:48
there or we're going to have
50:49
the mayor there and you're going to have
50:50
somebody from FEMA and if you are
50:52
involved as an advocate and you attend
50:54
those things
50:55
you know the FEMA people take notice
50:56
they're like oh well you know there's
50:58
miss hardwick from trla and
51:00
she's been going on and on about
51:01
affidavits of heirship are sufficient
51:04
and the mayor of the county judge hasn't
51:05
shut her down yet she must she must be
51:07
telling the truth or whatever
51:08
just wear them down yeah so you know
51:11
those working relationships you know
51:12
when when you've done enough work with
51:14
people and they can trust you know
51:15
tdcha i send them i send them documents
51:18
now they don't even question them three
51:19
years later they know that i have always
51:21
been
51:22
above board i've always been
51:23
professional i've always been ethical if
51:25
i tell you i've done this and i've shown
51:26
you i've done it
51:27
i've done it and now i mean i get
51:29
results with them
51:30
minutes hours days as opposed to sitting
51:33
in line
51:33
a month that's a working relationship
51:35
and we all have to work really hard to
51:36
protect our reputation so that people
51:38
you know want to help our clients
51:40
because they trust that we've done
51:41
what we're supposed to do so what
51:44
correct me if i'm wrong but
51:46
what i'm hearing from someone who's
51:48
never had to do
51:49
with FEMA before but who's been
51:52
involved in different administrative law
51:54
type of procedures and hearings and
51:57
whatnot
51:58
it sounds like there's a lot of
51:59
transferable skills it sounds like
52:01
obviously probate attorneys you'd be
52:02
able to pull them in but
52:04
to me even maybe tax attorneys or
52:07
unemployment
52:08
attorneys or immigration attorneys or
52:10
social security attorneys
52:11
it sounds like a skill that would be
52:13
transferable to someone who has
52:15
that type of experience is that right no
52:17
absolutely you know you're dealing with
52:19
administrative law for sure
52:21
if anybody's ever done any kind of
52:23
like administrative law reviews at the
52:25
state level
52:26
you've ever done you know for even our
52:27
criminal defense attorneys if they've
52:29
ever defended a driver's license
52:30
suspension related to a dwi
52:32
the processes are very similar in any
52:34
kind of admin law
52:35
tax attorneys are great you know
52:38
something i didn't get a chance to touch
52:40
on real quick and i'll just touch on
52:41
briefly and y'all might even have a
52:42
podcast for this but
52:43
when you talk about getting a client
52:45
title and i was talking to belinda about
52:47
you know kind of the holistic approach
52:49
we've gotten their home repaired
52:51
they now have title to their home can we
52:53
do estate planning documents for them so
52:55
now
52:55
the next generations can have this home
52:57
protected and move on down the line
52:59
community education what can you do to
53:01
clear title now before disaster
53:03
are you getting all the tax exemptions
53:06
you're qualified for
53:07
you know when we go ahead and clear tile
53:09
for a client the first thing we do is
53:10
help them fill out those tax exemptions
53:12
they can now most of them do they're
53:13
over 65 they can do their homestead
53:15
they might have been living in a
53:16
property and claiming a homestead and a
53:18
family member who
53:20
homestead it was has passed away now
53:21
there's back taxes can we help them
53:24
work out a payment plan can we get some
53:26
of those taxes taken away
53:28
but of course you know our clients
53:29
are already on limited income
53:31
and they're missing out on those tax
53:32
benefits you know they're struggling to
53:35
pay their property taxes every year
53:37
but for clear title and a homestead
53:39
exemption or a deferral or
53:41
you know something like that so tax
53:42
attorneys volunteer tax attorneys are
53:44
great i mean all of these
53:46
all of these title issues have so many
53:47
offshoots we talked about the risk of
53:49
eviction financial exploitation
53:51
there's just so many different things
53:54
that once you can get into that title
53:56
work so yeah i mean i would say
53:58
any attorney anywhere that's graduated
54:00
from law school and past their bar
54:02
obviously has those skills to gather
54:04
information investigate the facts
54:07
client interviews some clients
54:10
of ours you know have been helped by
54:13
attorneys that work for very very large
54:15
law firms in the big cities that don't
54:16
have as much day-to-day interaction with
54:18
a real live
54:19
person they might be representing
54:21
corporations
54:22
overseas clients they haven't you know
54:24
i've had
54:26
corporate attorneys that have never been
54:28
in a county court
54:29
law before certainly not in a little
54:31
bitty teeny tiny coastal town and they
54:33
go
54:34
wow yeah wow there's deputies and
54:37
there's
54:38
you know and the security is kind of
54:39
lacks in some places you know you go
54:40
probate a will
54:41
in harris county you know it's a
54:43
multi-story building there's lots of
54:45
security you go in some of the smaller
54:46
counties and
54:47
and literally the deputies just there
54:49
ready to
54:50
defend if he has to but there's
54:53
no pat downs there's no searches there's
54:55
no security
54:56
it's just a free-for-all yeah you know
54:58
there might be criminal defendants in
55:00
there sitting with you next to
55:01
you know elderly clients that are there
55:03
to probate a will so
55:05
you know and for some attorneys to kind
55:07
of get out of their comfort zone
55:09
or you know like i said have that
55:10
day-to-day action with a real you know
55:12
real life client and like i said it's an
55:13
immediate
55:15
benefit to what you do for our clients
55:17
yeah i have that same
55:19
similar experience uh down in webster i
55:21
was the only one in a suit and so
55:22
they're just like you're an attorney all
55:24
right of course that way
55:26
that was it i love it
55:30
what you said earlier yeah a lot of
55:33
the
55:34
importance is clearing their titles so
55:36
they can get those funds but yeah
55:37
setting up the next generation so they
55:39
we don't
55:39
run across the same problem because as
55:42
you said it's not
55:43
if there's another disaster it's when
55:44
there's another disaster so when the
55:46
next one rolls around
55:48
the next generation may have inherited
55:50
that house so i know
55:51
we always try to do a transfer on death
55:54
deed or
55:55
just something similar some sort of
55:57
estate planning out there and
55:58
yeah maybe familiar with the transfer of
56:00
death deed out there it's not
56:02
terribly well known but it basically
56:05
transfers title
56:06
automatically upon death it's a form you
56:09
fill out
56:10
you file with the real property upon the
56:13
death of the
56:14
owner it can transfer to whoever they
56:16
wish without the need for probate so
56:18
that is like gold for our clients who won’t probate
56:22
anyway yeah and when you talk about
56:24
being able to use the todd
56:26
you have to have that good legal
56:28
description and they have to have had
56:29
that deed
56:30
to move it on down so yeah once we've
56:31
done all this title cleaning work we've
56:33
now gotten our clients to the position
56:34
yes can we do a todd
56:36
and will that be much more economical
56:37
than setting them up for some kind of
56:39
probate that's not appropriate for
56:41
you know their assets and their estate
56:43
and what not and then the community
56:45
ed
56:45
i mean anybody that will listen i will
56:47
go on and on to them about
56:49
do you have a will do you have a todd do
56:51
you do you have the deed in your home
56:52
there's gonna be another hurricane
56:53
there's always something brewing in the
56:55
gulf until
56:56
through october and you know three years
56:58
it's gone by but
57:00
you know if something that devastating
57:01
hits us again i would much rather our
57:03
clients be in
57:03
a better position or potential clients
57:06
or you know anybody
57:07
that estate planning so every time we do
57:09
one of those wills clinics jump on
57:11
board to help with those
57:12
the more wills and todd's we can crank
57:14
out pre-disaster
57:16
absolutely and then talking to people
57:17
about their tax exemptions and just
57:18
getting everything
57:19
just getting everything in order for the
57:21
next generation sure
57:23
that's another thing a lot of people
57:24
don't realize some of the state and
57:26
local funding you have to be caught up
57:28
on your taxes
57:29
before you qualify for a lot of those
57:31
funds so any back taxes you're
57:34
out of the gate so yeah exemptions and
57:36
sometimes the deferrals
57:38
can help them access those funds
57:41
back child support
57:41
we talked about the medicaid estate
57:43
recovery any kind of financial
57:45
thing so when when stuart's asking
57:47
about other attorneys family law
57:49
attorneys bankruptcy attorneys i mean
57:51
really they're the carry over and within
57:54
trla you know i'm sure with you guys
57:56
when we
57:57
place these cases or with volunteers you
57:59
obviously try to look to somebody that
58:00
has a background in that or what they're
58:02
professionally comfortable with but
58:03
there is support i mean
58:05
if you've practiced some really complex
58:07
litigation or complex cases or you know
58:09
just been practicing for any amount of
58:10
time
58:12
you know step off into it if you need
58:14
assistance ask for assistance it's like
58:15
any new attorney taking a case you
58:17
find a mentor get a mentor we'll mentor
58:20
you i'll volunteer pablo to mentor
58:22
thank you so much yeah i have enough
58:25
time you know with homeschooling and
58:27
other stuff why not do that
58:29
exactly exactly but
58:33
we never want to discourage anybody from
58:35
taking on some of these cases that they
58:36
can
58:37
so and i know people probably think i'm
58:39
i'm pollyanna about it but truly i mean
58:42
we do
58:42
make such a difference in our clients
58:44
lives and we take on those cases this
58:46
week
58:47
i have been simultaneously drafting an
58:50
affidavit of heirship
58:51
and a special warranty deed all related
58:54
to defending
58:55
against an eviction because title is at
58:59
issue
59:00
and then also talking to the client
59:02
about the
59:03
buy out through the general land office
59:04
because she's a harvey survivor and
59:07
she's in the floodplain
59:09
so it's been one of those weeks where
59:12
the housing team said hey there's this
59:14
eviction case but it has all this other
59:16
stuff
59:17
that you'd be used to so multifaceted
59:20
for sure
59:22
Belinda any final points before we wind
59:24
down here we want to thank dina
59:26
anything else uh none of this time thank
59:29
you so much
59:30
being with us
i got nothing but i learned a
59:33
lot though
59:34
that was a lot definitely yeah and
59:36
listen yeah i think you mentioned it
59:37
too
59:38
and it's very important you provide the
59:39
stability with these kind of cases to
59:41
have the person just move forward to the
59:42
next level there's so many issues that
59:44
come up
59:44
when disaster recovery so thank you for
59:46
providing us you know that little
59:48
important piece of information that
59:49
happens so often that people don't
59:51
realize how often
59:52
it happens in these cases dina
59:55
thank you
59:55
very informative uh thank you for having
59:57
left i know people caught this but she
59:58
left a successful private practice
60:00
For legal aid that's what she said you have
60:02
to an unsuccessful legal aid
60:05
yeah right yeah that comes around good
60:07
at raise time going you know
60:10
yeah right so thank you again we're all
60:12
So lucky to have you
60:14
yes i'm honored you guys asked me to do
60:16
this i appreciate it
60:17
okay then thank you all nice seeing
60:20
y'all y'all take it easy and uh keep an
60:22
eye out on the Gulf and see what happens
60:24
in their next
60:24
round of clients when they couldn't come
60:26
in for those pro bono volunteers
60:28
listening to this go to that
60:29
website texaslegalhelp.simplejustice.org
60:34
and find out more resources like this
60:35
one