My wife and I will soon begin selling her mother's home, with Power of Attorney, with a view to moving her into Sheltered Housing, the latter being the sort you must buy, along with paying a monthly fee for services. The mother owns 50% of her home, the rest being a life interest trust from her deceased husband's estate. At sale, the late husband's children will inherit their 50%, the mother will get her 50% for the new property. Together with her savings, this is enough to buy the new Sheltered Housing, although her savings alone would not be sufficient.
The Estate Agent tells us that the time from marketing her home to completion could be 6 months, whereas we know that vacancies in the Sheltered Housing we are waiting for could appear suddenly; a resident dies or moves into Nursing Home care etc. At that point the family of the Sheltered Housing ex-resident may may want to sell quickly, as they will still have to pay the services charge (over £500 pcm) until sold. We are concerned that we might lose the opportunity to buy the Sheltered Housing due to the 6 months taken to sell the mother's home.
The mother is 84 years old. It occurred to my wife and I that we might be able to offer this elderly lady a Bridging Loan drawn from our own savings. This would allow her to, combined with her own savings, buy the Sheltered Housing as soon as available and move straight to it, something of extra benefit as her health is declining and living alone is challenging for her.
My question is how might a solicitor draw up such a bridging loan agreement from my wife & I to her mother, to be repaid as soon as her own home was sold? A number of scenarios would need to be covered, such that my wife & I would be 'first in the queue' for repayment, if say her mother died at some point before her home was sold, after exchange of contracts but before completion, or if she had to at some point move into Residential/Nursing Home care and the local council sought to take her assets and any home she held before/after completion on the Sheltered Housing. How might our bridging loan be best protected against these different scenarios?
The Estate Agent tells us that the time from marketing her home to completion could be 6 months, whereas we know that vacancies in the Sheltered Housing we are waiting for could appear suddenly; a resident dies or moves into Nursing Home care etc. At that point the family of the Sheltered Housing ex-resident may may want to sell quickly, as they will still have to pay the services charge (over £500 pcm) until sold. We are concerned that we might lose the opportunity to buy the Sheltered Housing due to the 6 months taken to sell the mother's home.
The mother is 84 years old. It occurred to my wife and I that we might be able to offer this elderly lady a Bridging Loan drawn from our own savings. This would allow her to, combined with her own savings, buy the Sheltered Housing as soon as available and move straight to it, something of extra benefit as her health is declining and living alone is challenging for her.
My question is how might a solicitor draw up such a bridging loan agreement from my wife & I to her mother, to be repaid as soon as her own home was sold? A number of scenarios would need to be covered, such that my wife & I would be 'first in the queue' for repayment, if say her mother died at some point before her home was sold, after exchange of contracts but before completion, or if she had to at some point move into Residential/Nursing Home care and the local council sought to take her assets and any home she held before/after completion on the Sheltered Housing. How might our bridging loan be best protected against these different scenarios?
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