Legal Question in Real Estate Law in California

grant deed with ex-husband

a relative has a notarized grant deed for a property she lives in, in which she appears as ''joint tennant'' with her ex-husband. This was done in exchange for the 100K+ check she wrote to the Mortgage Co. in charge of the property loan, which I believe would be called ''the consideration'', however it is not stated in the document. Now the ex-husband is abusing this relative and wants her to leave the property and told her he would only pay 80-90% of the amount she put in. What are her rights and how could she be sure that she would get, at least, the amount of money she put in? The property is worth probably 5-7 times the money she put in. The verbal agreement was that she would live there rent-free, utilities-free till he pays the money back. Now he doesn't want to pay the whole amount and to make things worst, eventhough he doesn't live there, he has keys and comes in and out when he pleases to bully her and verbally abuse her. She needs to move out. What's the best way to proceed here?


Asked on 2/05/09, 8:14 pm

3 Answers from Attorneys

OCEAN BEACH ASSOCIATES OCEAN BEACH ASSOCIATES

Re: grant deed with ex-husband

If she is a joint tenant, then she cannot be made to leave. Why wasn't this dealt with in the divorce? She should file for a partition and an injunction preventing him from coming on the property. Contact me directly.

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Answered on 2/06/09, 1:33 pm
Bryan Whipple Bryan R. R. Whipple, Attorney at Law

Re: grant deed with ex-husband

First, I have read the two previous answers and do not necessarily agree with them.

I would start by getting a domestic violence restraining order requiring the ex-husband to stay away. This can be done, I'm pretty sure, even though he is a co-owner and entitled to co-possession, because he is not now in possession.

Second, I would advise the lady to go over the economics of the property very carefully - What the property is "worth" has several meanings here. The house might sell for $1 million, and in a sense that's what it's worth, but if there are $800,000 of loans on it, a sale will net less than $200,000 after commissions, and each owner would get half of that! Any reflection on the value of the house should take into account the value of her current possession and occupancy of the property, vs. having to pay rent somewhere else.

I would consider changing the locks after getting the restraining order. This might be an "ouster" - a kind of impermissible interference with a co-owner's right of shared possession - but I think excusable here because he would lose his rights to "visit" due to the restraining order anyway.

The law provides an escape hatch for unhappy co-owners of property through a special kind of lawsuit known as a "partition" suit. A partition suit asks a court to order the property sold and the net proceeds (after paying the costs of sale including commissions, and the liens and mortgages) divided fairly between the former owners.

The starting point for fair division of the net proceeds, when the property was held in joint tenancy, is 50-50. However, the judge or a referee appointed by the judge can alter the split of the cash based upon evidence that one co-owner is entitled to reimbursement for excess outlays for necessary expenditures such as principal and interest, property taxes, insurance and necessary repairs.

Whether the oral agreement between the co-owners would be given much weight in deciding the allocation of the proceeds after a partition is somewhat doubtful, but it might be. On the other hand, neither co-owner is entitled to charge or collect rent from the other, regardless of which lives there and which doesn't.

All in all, this is a rather complex situation, and the relative herself should be seeking legal and real-estate advice from professionals.

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Answered on 2/07/09, 6:43 pm
Bryan C. Becker Your Lawyer for Life.

Re: grant deed with ex-husband

This can be complicated, but a forced sale of the property seems necessary. If the joint tenants sell the property, they must equally divide the proceeds of the sale. Because disagreement over the disposition of property is common, courts sometimes intervene to divide the property equally among the owners.

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Answered on 2/05/09, 8:59 pm


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