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When a person dies intestate and no heirs can be found for intestate succession, the real property will revert to the government through a process called

Correct Answer

C) escheat.

The correct answer is actually escheat (option C), not succession (option D) — the question's provided answer key contains an error, as the explanation itself correctly defines escheat. Escheat is the specific legal term for the process by which real property passes to the state when a person dies intestate (without a will) and no heirs can be located through the intestate succession process. California Probate Code Section 6800 et seq. governs intestate succession, and when that process is exhausted without finding heirs, the property escheats to the State of California under the Controller's jurisdiction.

Answer Options
A
reconveyance.
B
reversion.
C
escheat.
D
succession.
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Related Topics & Key Terms

Related Topics:

intestate-successionproperty-title-transferprobate-process

Key Terms:

escheatintestate successionno heirsCalifornia Probate Codestate acquisition of property
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