from the CRAg guidlines:
7.017 Where a resident is a joint beneficial owner of property, i.e. he has the right to receive some of
the proceeds of a sale, it is the resident's interest in the property which is to be valued as
capital, and not the property itself. The value of this interest is governed by
1. the resident's ability to re-assign the beneficial interest to somebody else
2. there being a market i.e. the interest being such as to attract a willing buyer for
the interest. Regulation 27(2)
7.018 In most cases there is unlikely to be any legal impediment preventing a joint beneficial interest
in a property being re-assigned. But the likelihood of there being a willing buyer will depend on
the conditions in which the joint beneficial interest has arisen.
7.019 Where an interest in a property is beneficially shared between relatives, the value of the
resident's interest will be heavily influenced by the possibility of a market amongst his fellow
beneficiaries. If no other relative is willing to buy the resident's interest, it is highly unlikely that
any "outsider" would be willing to buy into the property unless the financial advantages far
outweighed the risks and limitations involved. The value of the interest, even to a willing buyer,
could in such circumstances effectively be nil. If the local authority is unsure about the resident's
share, or their valuation is disputed by the resident, again a professional valuation should be
obtained.