No it is not...it was grounded on the Fourth and Fifth Amendments. Not part of the Bill of Rights
The fourth amendment of the Constitution specifically protects the property of the citizens. That means that there are no unreasonable searches and seizures. Another part is that there are no warrants issued without probable cause.
It is part of the Bill of Rights and the block of 10 amendments was passed in 1787.
In the Bill of Rights the fourth amendment says the government must have a warrant and probable cause to search and/or seizure of your property.
If the property is owned by a valid trust it is not part of the decedent's estate. The purpose of the trust was to protect and preserve the property for the children. The second wife has no rights in the property.
If you are not on the deed you have no rights in the property. If you are not legally married and the owner dies you have no legal rights in the property.
Subsequent property rights would refer to property rights that arise after you take title to the property. An example would be your obtaining an easement from your neighbor after you purchase your property.
No. Water rights generally are not part of land ownership.
Intellectual property law defines intellectual property rights.
In most states there aren't any dower rights on investment property. They have rights on regular property but not inheritance or investment.
The rights in the real property are a part of the estate. If the property was owned with rights of survivorship, the daughter may claim title without going through probate. Consult an attorney who does probate work in your jurisdiciton.
Deeds don't have co-signers; loans have co-signers. Loan responsibility and property ownership rights are separate. If you are listed as a part-owner of a property it CAN NOT be sold without your signature on the transfer documents. If you are a co-signer on a mortgage loan but are not listed on the deed, you have no property rights unless you have rights under community property laws.