Joke Collection Website - Talk about mood - The land was expropriated by the state, and the married aunt came back to ask for money. Is she qualified?

The land was expropriated by the state, and the married aunt came back to ask for money. Is she qualified?

Nowadays, most daughters do their duty of support. Don't support, doesn't mean others don't support. Besides, if you have any legal knowledge, it's your own money. If my brother is sensible, he should take the initiative to give it to his sister. The account has not been moved. There is already someone else's money, and others are not qualified to hide it. If you don't want to be generous, don't take it for granted

Land is divided according to the head, not belonging to family property. If the married daughter lives in her mother's house, her husband's family will have no hukou, and her husband's family village will not give her land. This is not a house expropriation. Land requisition must be signed here. Regardless of whether you are married or not, people who have land in the household registration book should share it. Realistically speaking, it should not be my aunt who wants it, but my family should take the initiative to give it, but there is generally no such rule in the village. If I come back and ask for it, the whole village will talk behind my back. Maybe I can get the money back from the lawsuit, but my mother's house probably won't!

Houses are demolished in rural areas, and married daughters are generally not divided. This land is divided according to population. When a daughter gets married, the land will not be taken away, and Pojia Village will not divide the land. Therefore, rural land acquisition is equivalent to buying out the length of service of urban workers, and this money must be divided.

No wonder my aunt doesn't want to move. Before I was assigned a room, their family asked me to move there quickly, saying that I could get more. Later, people said that my baby and I didn't, but my aunt did. Hehe, I'm speechless. According to the statistics of village heads going door to door, people say that married people don't count, for fear that many people will move their registered permanent residence back in order to get more points on purpose. It's been three years, and I don't have a hair. The house is still built there. My parents have done a lot for us. I graduated from college and have a younger brother at home. I hope my brother and wife have nothing to say. Husband's family conditions are ok. I haven't mentioned this for more than ten years. Forget it.

The water spilled by the married daughter was donated by her parents. There will be no daughters at home in the future. Now everyone knows that daughters also have the obligation to raise their parents. In reality, it is the son who is raising, which is necessary. Daughter support is voluntary and not necessary. As for parents, after a hundred years, the inheritance will go to the son. With the development of society, some parents are slowly changing their ideas and have heard of giving part of their property to their daughters. This is a reality. As long as there is no strong opposition from relatives and no prosecution, the state administrative department will not interfere. Social harmony needs everyone to maintain. Many things are not right or wrong. As long as you live up to your conscience, tolerance is harmony.

Married people in rural areas who are legally married, but have not moved out of their registered permanent residence, will not be given any compensation unless their parents are willing to remarry their married daughters after receiving compensation. Daughters under the age of 18 and adult daughters with unmarried hukou are included. A married daughter is not counted as long as she has reached the age of 18 and has not moved out of her household registration. If it is other money, you are right. Children have the same rights and responsibilities. However, this is a special land acquisition. If the daughter's household registration is removed and there is no land, it should not be divided. I don't understand the law at all, so let's analyze it according to reason. The daughter has land in her husband's family, and the rights and obligations directly related to the land should be transferred to her husband's family.

There are two or three aspects of land expropriation compensation, one is household registration compensation, the other is land compensation, and the third is housing compensation. If the household registration is in place, the land will be allocated that year. Then you should get compensation for land and household registration. As for the house, it depends on whether it is rebuilt or not.

As long as it can be assigned to other places, the account that has not been married abroad has not been transferred to the unit, no matter where it is married. The field is hers, and the other is that her parents are transferred to the field with the unit and put aside. It seems that after 2000, as long as there are no civil servants, the account transferred to the unit field has not been dialed.

It depends on whether your village has redistributed land after your aunt got married! If there is, it is almost certain that her former land will be given, because after she gets married, she will be taken away by the village and redistributed to families with birth population! If not, her land must still be there.

Legal but unreasonable, some truth always runs counter to the law. Some families have sons and children, grandma has no land, and moved away after marriage, but the land in those years has not moved. There used to be many brick factories selling land here, so it can be said that no girl went back to ask her parents for money. I haven't heard of this hidden rule.

If the account hasn't moved out yet, you have to divide the money! If the account moves out, there will be no copy! Our daughter, who has been married for decades, has never moved out of her household registration, and her parents have removed and allocated a house. The government gave these married daughters a house separately, not counting the houses allocated by their parents. On the surface, it looks good, but in fact, I still look down on my daughter, because sons can be divided into three sets. According to the truth, the household registration can be divided into three sets, but the government only gives one set on the grounds of marrying a wife. Therefore, there is a reason for the preference for boys over girls in rural areas!