Legal Question in Real Estate Law in California

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I am divorced. My ex wife and I own two properties that were not included in the divorce settlement. We own title equally. I want to sell and she does not. Can I use a Partition Action to force her to sell them. She does not live in either of the properties.

The properties were listed in the divorce settlement with a FMV listed to be split between us. But we never sold them. We own the properties outright. Does this change my best approach to get her to sell the properties.


Asked on 7/21/11, 5:22 pm

3 Answers from Attorneys

Joel Selik www.SelikLaw.com

A partition action would be the proper method.

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Answered on 7/21/11, 5:34 pm
Bryan Whipple Bryan R. R. Whipple, Attorney at Law

I would assume the divorce court no longer has jurisdiction under Family Code section 2556 or otherwise; this would leave partition as the remaining possibility to force a termination of the co-ownership. Further, the fact that the properties are owned outright points toward a financially favorable result, particularly if the two of you can agree on some aspects (such as asking price, selection of a broker, taking some of the financial issues away from the court and submitting them to arbitration, etc.) or even an out-of-court settlement.

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Answered on 7/21/11, 5:51 pm

If disposition of the properties was not set out in the divorce judgment, the divorce court is still the most efficient option. Just because the value of the properties was allocated, does not mean the property was not omitted from the property distribution. If ownership was not expressly allocated and assigned post-divorce, you should still be able to get a division by sale, buy out (or any other option available in a partition) in the divorce court faster and cheaper than a new partition action. You should see a family law attorney for a review of your MSA and/or judgment to determine whether the family court still has jurisdiction. Generally even after a divorce is final the court retains jurisdiction over unresolved issues as a matter of law, but that can be altered by the terms of the MSA and judgment. If the family court does not have jurisdiction, then the previous answers are correct that a new partition action is the only option if negotiations fail.

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Answered on 7/21/11, 9:34 pm


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