A father in Brooklyn wants to keep the family home out of Surrogate’s Court. He reads an article online, downloads a generic quitclaim deed, and adds his adult daughter’s name to the title as a joint tenant. He files the paperwork and feels a profound sense of accomplishment, believing he has successfully protected his family’s wealth. But he forgets one critical detail: the $400,000 mortgage remains entirely in his name alone. When he eventually passes away, his daughter will discover that owning the physical property and controlling the debt attached to it are two entirely distinct realities.
We see this scenario frequently in our practice. Property owners try to be proactive by adjusting their deeds, entirely untethering the ownership of the real estate from the financial obligation of the mortgage. The result?
Exposure.
Having a name on the deed but not on the mortgage is a common situation, often arising from credit discrepancies between spouses or well-intentioned but flawed generational wealth transfers. While legal, it creates a precarious environment that requires deliberate, prudent planning to manage correctly.
The Disconnect Between Title and Debt
To understand the risks, we first must separate the documents involved in a real estate transaction. When you purchase a home, you are actually dealing with three distinct legal instruments.
The deed is the document that transfers and proves ownership of the property. The promissory note is the personal guarantee—the literal “I owe you”—signed by the borrower promising to repay the loan. The mortgage is the security instrument that ties the promissory note to the property, giving the lender the right to foreclose if the note is not paid.
When your name is on the deed but not the note or the mortgage, you have an ownership interest in the real estate, but you have no personal contractual obligation to pay the bank. If the mortgage goes unpaid, the bank cannot garnish your wages or seize your personal bank accounts. However, because the mortgage acts as a lien against the entire property, the bank can still foreclose on the home. You will not owe the bank a dime, but you will lose the house.
The Threat of the Due-on-Sale Clause
One of the most immediate risks of altering a deed without addressing the mortgage is the acceleration of the loan. Nearly every modern mortgage contains a due-on-sale clause. This provision states that if the borrower transfers any interest in the property without the lender’s prior written consent, the lender can demand the entire remaining balance of the loan immediately.
There are federal exceptions. The Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982 prohibits lenders from enforcing a due-on-sale clause in certain specific situations—such as a transfer to a spouse or children, or a transfer resulting from the death of a joint tenant. However, transferring a partial interest to a sibling, a business partner, or an unmarried co-habitant can absolutely trigger this clause. If the bank discovers the transfer, they can call the note due. If the original borrower cannot pay the balance in full, foreclosure proceedings begin.
What Happens When the Borrower Dies?
The most severe complications arise when the sole individual on the mortgage passes away, leaving a surviving co-owner on the deed. Many people assume that if the property passes to a surviving joint tenant, the debt is somehow wiped out or absorbed by the deceased’s broader estate. New York law explicitly rejects this assumption.
Under New York Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) § 3-3.6, an individual who receives real property subject to a mortgage takes that property subject to the encumbrance. The executor of the decedent’s estate has no fiduciary duty to pay off the mortgage using other estate assets unless the decedent’s will explicitly directs them to do so.
This means the surviving owner inherits the equity, but they also inherit the practical burden of the debt. If they want to keep the house, the mortgage must continue to be paid.
This creates a massive logistical hurdle. Because the surviving owner is not on the promissory note, the bank will often refuse to speak with them. Lenders are bound by strict privacy laws and will not discuss loan modifications, forbearance, or refinancing with someone who is not a party to the contract. The surviving owner is left making payments into a void, unable to access account details or negotiate terms until they go through the arduous process of legally proving their right to assume the mortgage or refinancing the property entirely in their own name.
Uneven Ownership and the Illusion of Protection
Even among living co-owners, having uneven representation on the deed and the mortgage creates friction. Consider a married couple where only one spouse qualifies for the mortgage due to the other’s poor credit history. Both go on the deed, but only one goes on the loan.
While this is a practical reality for many families, it leaves the borrowing spouse carrying 100 percent of the financial liability while holding only 50 percent of the equity. If the relationship deteriorates, the non-borrowing spouse can force a partition sale or refuse to contribute to the mortgage, knowing their personal credit report is insulated from the fallout.
True stewardship of family assets requires aligning ownership with financial reality. A deed is not a contingency plan; it is simply a statement of fact about who owns the dirt and bricks. Relying on a deed to do the work of a deliberate estate plan is a fundamental misunderstanding of how wealth is preserved.
A Deliberate Path Forward
If your goal is to protect a spouse, pass property to a child, or keep a family home out of Surrogate’s Court, haphazardly adding names to a deed is rarely the appropriate mechanism.
Instead of fracturing the title, we frequently utilize revocable living trusts. By transferring the property into a carefully drafted trust, the original owner retains total control over the asset during their lifetime. The Garn-St. Germain Act specifically protects transfers into a revocable trust from triggering the due-on-sale clause, provided the borrower remains a beneficiary and occupies the home. Upon the owner’s death, the trust acts as a custodian, dictating exactly how the property—and the debt attached to it—should be managed, completely outside the purview of the court system.
Legacy is not built by accident. It requires intentional structuring that anticipates how banks, courts, and the law will react to your absence.
If you recently modified a deed, or if you are currently holding title to a property where the mortgage does not match the ownership record, schedule a 30-minute deed and mortgage review with our office. We will evaluate your current legal exposure and draft the specific instruments required to ensure your property transfers exactly as you intend.



