ChatterBank2 mins ago
Can I stay in the house?
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No best answer has yet been selected by pattie5853. 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.There are a couple of things worth thinking about :-
(1) As you are living there you are technically making a contribution to the upkeep of the property (housework, cooking, paying some bills, keeping it habitable so that the man can work, gardening, washing etc etc). It would not be unreasonable therefore if you asked your boyfriend to put the property into your joint names as joint tenants so that in the event of the grim-reaper calling the property passes to you without wills, inheritance tax, probate, etc.
(2) In the event of a refusal you still have a claim against the property on the grounds that I have outlined, and for the small cost involved you might like to consider employing a solicitor to place a charge against the property at the Land Registry which prevents it from being passed on or being sold from under you until your claim has been settled.
There was an article in today's Observer which deals precisely with this issue. If interested, I suggest you go to the Observer website: http://observer.guardian.co.uk/cash/ and, in the "search the site" box, type the article title, which is: Forget pillow talk - sign a contract . The full details are: Forget pillow talk - sign a contract. Many unwed couples still believe in the myth of the common law marriage, warns Jon Robins. Sunday February 13, 2005. The Observer.
This is because when I have tried to post a link before, it did not seem to work. By the way there was also an article about inheritance tax between unmarried partners which may also interest you, which is as follows: Why it's time to defuse the time bomb facing couples. Up to 200,000 unmarried partners face a huge penalty, writes Neasa MacErlean. Sunday February 13, 2005. The Observer.
They are both in the Cash section of the Observer.
Are you sure that it is entirely your boyfriends house and that others (an ex wife perhaps or some or all of his children) are not co-owners? If you would like to be absolutely certain click this link
http://www.landregisteronline.gov.uk/servlet/TitleSearchServlet
and follow the very easy instructions. You need only see the Register (of which you can print a copy for future use) and look under Registered Proprietor(s). It will also tell you if there is a mortgage and other borrowings against the property, who with, but not the amounts.