One of the principal advantages of holding California real property in joint tenancy is the right of survivorship — when one joint tenant dies, title vests automatically in the surviving joint tenants by operation of law, without probate. Nothing technically "passes" from the deceased joint tenant to the survivor; the survivor takes from the original instrument that created the joint tenancy.
But automatic vesting is not the same as clean record title. Until the county land records reflect the death, the deceased joint tenant remains a named owner on the public record, and no buyer, lender, or title insurer will treat the surviving tenant as the sole owner. The standard cure is an Affidavit of Death of Joint Tenant, recorded under California Probate Code §§ 210 and 211.
Probate Code § 210 provides that if title to real property is affected by the death of a person, any person may record in the county where the property is located certain documents establishing the fact of death — including an affidavit. The affidavit must include a particular description of the real property and an attested or certified copy of a death record made and filed in a designated public office.
Once recorded, the county recorder indexes the affidavit in the grantor-grantee index, with the deceased joint tenant indexed as the grantor and the surviving joint tenants as the grantees. Title insurers and third parties (including potential buyers) can then rely on the recorded affidavit as evidence of who owns the property.
A parallel statutory affidavit exists for surviving spouses who held property as joint tenants under Probate Code § 5602, which is functionally similar but recites the spousal relationship.
A properly drafted Affidavit of Death of Joint Tenant should include:
A certified copy of the death certificate must be attached. Most California counties will record the death certificate as part of the affidavit; a few require a redacted version because of social security number visibility under Health & Safety Code § 103526 — confirm with the specific county recorder.
The affidavit is recorded in the county where the real property is located. Required at recording:
The Affidavit of Death of Joint Tenant is a small document with outsized consequences. Done right, it perfects record title in a single recording and avoids probate entirely. Done wrong — defective legal description, missing PCOR, overlooked BOE-19-P — it creates a title cloud that surfaces years later when the surviving owner tries to sell or refinance
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