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Estoppel Question Advise Needed
Me and my partner live in my parents house for 15 years now they want me out in the past on numerous occasions they have promised me and my partner the house but nothing on paper
The deeds are in there name and we have never paid any rent or mortgage but we have spent money on the property over 10 years about 15k . Do I have any chance of keeping the house or staying here we have 2 children the solicitor had advised me of estoppel saying that you parents have broken there promise?Additional DetailsI forgot to mention me and my husband are separated know he is saying that no promise was made I have a witness to the promise but we did apply for local housing housing register waiting for a house will that have any significance ?
As the landlords are saying one of the conditions of staying there was that you stay on the hosing register.
In other words we did not reply to our detriment can this act bee taken like this ?
The deeds are in there name and we have never paid any rent or mortgage but we have spent money on the property over 10 years about 15k . Do I have any chance of keeping the house or staying here we have 2 children the solicitor had advised me of estoppel saying that you parents have broken there promise?Additional DetailsI forgot to mention me and my husband are separated know he is saying that no promise was made I have a witness to the promise but we did apply for local housing housing register waiting for a house will that have any significance ?
As the landlords are saying one of the conditions of staying there was that you stay on the hosing register.
In other words we did not reply to our detriment can this act bee taken like this ?
Answers
Exactly, Tiger - you sort it out before you divorce, to prevent all this dirt being dished afterwards. Read what you've pasted: you will lose important rights to make any claims on property or finances. The property doesn't belong to your ex, so you can't claim from him. You haven't divorced your in-laws, they are nothing to do with it. They've been more than...
23:03 Thu 16th Jan 2014
Exactly, Tiger - you sort it out before you divorce, to prevent all this dirt being dished afterwards.
Read what you've pasted: you will lose important rights to make any claims on property or finances.
The property doesn't belong to your ex, so you can't claim from him. You haven't divorced your in-laws, they are nothing to do with it. They've been more than generous until now.
Read what you've pasted: you will lose important rights to make any claims on property or finances.
The property doesn't belong to your ex, so you can't claim from him. You haven't divorced your in-laws, they are nothing to do with it. They've been more than generous until now.
-- answer removed --
Your ex led you to believe the home was secure for you both to live & rear a family there. Now you discover you & kids have been cheated out of a home by your ex after 15y.
Had he owned the home at divorce you would have been awarded at least half value in Court. Ask the cheating ex's for half value as settlement or sit tight & let them try to evict you & kids.
Had he owned the home at divorce you would have been awarded at least half value in Court. Ask the cheating ex's for half value as settlement or sit tight & let them try to evict you & kids.
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