ChatterBank34 mins ago
Property Law- Cheating girlfriend
My friends girlfriend has been cheating on him. She has moved back in to her parents. My friend wants to buy her out and early last night she agreed to let my friend buy her out. Signing the relevent documents to release the deeds. Then changed her mind and ripped up the form, then decided she is moving back in. He is the main income provider, but she does work. What my queston is.
She states that she is going to fight him all the way to sell the house,just because she does not want him to have another woman in the house when she has gone.
What rights has he got to stay in the house without selling. He can afford to buy her out,but she cannot. You would think she would take the money and run. There are no children involved. The citizen advice website was not much help. Any more advice would be great. Thanks in advance.
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by r4zorb4ck. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.She would have to apply to the court for an order for sale in the absence of agreement from the other co-owner.
If one co-owner can afford to purchase the others' share the court will almost always provide for that to happen; staying any order for sale to enable the other to purchase. The identity of the purchaser should be irrelavant provided the share is sold for market value & the court recognises this.
Provisions for the co-ownership can be found in the Family Law Act 1996 (as ammended - recently).
It would be to your friends advantage if he could show that he had made all the payments towards the mortgage and the original deposit.
Speaking from experiecn, when I broke up with my wife, I offered to purchase the house (solely in her name as she had purchased it before we met). She refused, but never made another mortgage payment after we split. This was just her being vindictive as she could well afford it.
Law degre and a Masters later, I think I can quite confidently say that he is in with a good chance. If I were him now though, I would make things concrete by applying to the County Court for both an Occupation order for him, and an exclusion order for his ex. Then get his solicitor to formaly request the buy out. As the ex is already out of the house, by making a compulsory sale order, they would probably do so knowing that they were not making one of the parties homeless.
Goodl luck to your friend.
Steve
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