AVOIDING DISPUTES OVER HOME OWNERSHIP
Before buying a property jointly, it is wise to have a TRUST DEED drawn up by a solicitor.
The trust deed will set out the intended ownership of the property which can be agreed on between the cohabitants.
The trust deed can also cover other issues:
Granting the option for either party to buy the other out in the event of a split.
Define issues which would lead to sale or delay a sale (eg. childs school leaving age)
Agreements on how mortgage payments, repairs and running costs will be shared.
Provisions for allowance to sell share to another party.
Trust deeds are not usually open to challenge in the court. Trust deeds can be used by any persons purchasing property together, not just cohabiting couples.
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The Privately Owned Family Home
The family home is usually the source of the main legal and financial problems that seperating couples face.
If the couple are married, the law assumes that they are both entitled to a share. If the property is owned in one persons name is largely irrelevant.
The court will view the home as an asset to be split if the couple divorce.
The courts will will view it as a priority that the wife and children are housed and this may extend to signing over the home to the wife in addition to any maintenance for herself and the children. Each family circumstance is different and the courts will ensure that the husband gets a roof over his head too.
However if the couple are unmarried the court will take a less generous view toward the female cohabitant (if she is living in her partners home) for it is primarily concerned with who is the strict legal owner of the property. As there is no marriage, the courts will be unable to treat the home as a family asset, therefore if it is owned in the mans sole name it is likely that he alone will be entitled to it, especially if he has paid all the mortgage payments due on it. By the same reasoning, if the property is jointly owned then each of them will be entitled to 50%
The legal starting point of an unmarried couple will be that the property will go to the person who legally owns the property, the fact that it has been used as a family home is unimportant. This presumption is rebuttable only if the person who is not on the title deeds can show it is in fact jointly owned. This is often difficult to prove, the sort of evidence required to show the property is jointly owned would include:
* correspondence between the couple which shows that the property was intended to be jointly owned even though it was placed in one persons sole name.
* if the deposit for the property was provided by the person whose name was not on the title deeds
* if mortgage payments (capital payments carry more weight than interest only only payments) were financed by the person whose name is not on the title deeds.
* if the person whose name is not on the title deeds has done a great deal of work to the property hence increasing its value (furnishings and decorating do not count)
* if the person whose name is not on the deeds can show there was an agreement or common intention to share ownership of the property and has acted in reliance on that to her financial detriment.
If there is a dispute as to whether a property is jointly owned, the person whose name is not on the deeds should seek legal advice urgently. This area of law is very complex and a solicitor would need to advise on each case individually, as the case law varies widely.
Before buying a property jointly, it is wise to have a TRUST DEED drawn up by a solicitor.
The trust deed will set out the intended ownership of the property which can be agreed on between the cohabitants.
The trust deed can also cover other issues:
Granting the option for either party to buy the other out in the event of a split.
Define issues which would lead to sale or delay a sale (eg. childs school leaving age)
Agreements on how mortgage payments, repairs and running costs will be shared.
Provisions for allowance to sell share to another party.
Trust deeds are not usually open to challenge in the court. Trust deeds can be used by any persons purchasing property together, not just cohabiting couples.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Privately Owned Family Home
The family home is usually the source of the main legal and financial problems that seperating couples face.
If the couple are married, the law assumes that they are both entitled to a share. If the property is owned in one persons name is largely irrelevant.
The court will view the home as an asset to be split if the couple divorce.
The courts will will view it as a priority that the wife and children are housed and this may extend to signing over the home to the wife in addition to any maintenance for herself and the children. Each family circumstance is different and the courts will ensure that the husband gets a roof over his head too.
However if the couple are unmarried the court will take a less generous view toward the female cohabitant (if she is living in her partners home) for it is primarily concerned with who is the strict legal owner of the property. As there is no marriage, the courts will be unable to treat the home as a family asset, therefore if it is owned in the mans sole name it is likely that he alone will be entitled to it, especially if he has paid all the mortgage payments due on it. By the same reasoning, if the property is jointly owned then each of them will be entitled to 50%
The legal starting point of an unmarried couple will be that the property will go to the person who legally owns the property, the fact that it has been used as a family home is unimportant. This presumption is rebuttable only if the person who is not on the title deeds can show it is in fact jointly owned. This is often difficult to prove, the sort of evidence required to show the property is jointly owned would include:
* correspondence between the couple which shows that the property was intended to be jointly owned even though it was placed in one persons sole name.
* if the deposit for the property was provided by the person whose name was not on the title deeds
* if mortgage payments (capital payments carry more weight than interest only only payments) were financed by the person whose name is not on the title deeds.
* if the person whose name is not on the title deeds has done a great deal of work to the property hence increasing its value (furnishings and decorating do not count)
* if the person whose name is not on the deeds can show there was an agreement or common intention to share ownership of the property and has acted in reliance on that to her financial detriment.
If there is a dispute as to whether a property is jointly owned, the person whose name is not on the deeds should seek legal advice urgently. This area of law is very complex and a solicitor would need to advise on each case individually, as the case law varies widely.
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