Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Divorce decree may hold answers to who owns home

- By Ilyce Glink and Samuel J. Tamkin Ilyce Glink is the CEO of Best Money Moves and Samuel J. Tamkin is a real estate attorney. Contact them through the website ThinkGlink.com.

Q: My grandparen­ts had a less-than-ideal marriage and a less-than-peaceful divorce. They both kept the house in their names and never quitclaime­d their ownership to the other. The way they left it, whoever died first lost the house.

My granny passed away in March of this year.

We’re wondering if she is the true owner of the house, because she and my mother paid for every single bill, mortgage, utilities, property tax for 12 years. Thank you for reading this and for your time. I am a huge fan of your work. A:

If we understand your question, it seems that your grandparen­ts owned a home and held that home as joint tenants with rights of survivorsh­ip. When they divorced, they decided that the title to the home would stay as it was and that the second to die would ultimately own the home.

When owners hold title to a home as joint tenants with rights of survivorsh­ip and one owner dies, the surviving owner becomes the sole owner of the home. If nothing changed between your grandparen­ts and the home continued to be held by them as joint tenants with rights of survivorsh­ip — even after the divorce — your grandfathe­r would now be the sole owner of the home.

But that isn’t necessaril­y the final word. Although you say they agreed that the survivor would be the sole owner of the home, is this what their divorce decree says? Sometimes people say certain things while the divorce decree says something else.

For example, we could imagine that the home was actually given to your grandmothe­r in the divorce settlement with the provision that your grandfathe­r deed his interest in the home to her.

Outside of the settlement,

he and your grandmothe­r decided they didn’t need or want to go to an attorney to draft the papers to put the title into your grandmothe­r’s name. But in this situation, the divorce decree may control ownership and your grandmothe­r might have had the legal right to be the sole owner of the home. When she died, the property would then stay in her estate instead of being transferre­d into your grandfathe­r’s name.

Now, let’s turn to the expenses your mom and grandmothe­r paid over the years. Although you say they paid all of the expenses of the property, that doesn’t automatica­lly

make either of them the owner of the home. Even if they paid the real estate taxes.

So, go back to the divorce decree. If the divorce decree doesn’t mention the home, then the arrangemen­t between your grandparen­ts may take precedence: Your grandmothe­r and mom live in the house and pay all of the expenses, and the last to die (between your grandmothe­r and grandfathe­r) gets the property. If this was the agreement, and there’s no paperwork to contradict it, then it seems to us that your grandfathe­r would now be the sole owner of the home.

Speaking of your grandfathe­r, what’s your mom’s relationsh­ip with him? What would your mother do if she inherited the property from your grandmothe­r? Did your grandmothe­r have a will naming your mother as heir?

What would your grandfathe­r do if he, in fact, owns the home? One possibilit­y is he may continue to allow the current arrangemen­t to continue: You and your mom continue to live in the home and pay all of the expenses.

Reading between the lines, it appears that your mother and her father don’t have a close relationsh­ip. So, start by finding your grandparen­ts’ divorce

decree and seeing what it says. Consult with a family attorney to understand the various possibilit­ies and what options your mother has. Then, your mother should connect with her father to discuss the future of the property.

You don’t know how your grandfathe­r will feel about the property after a dozen years. He might want to sell the property and pocket the profits. If that’s the case, perhaps your mother could buy the home directly from him. Or, he might have moved on with his life and would be fine having your mother continue to pay expenses and inherit the property after he dies. Or, perhaps he’ll give it to her now; although, we think that given the length of family ownership, it would be better for her financiall­y to inherit it rather than receive it as a gift.

But, if their relationsh­ip is tenuous or nonexisten­t, getting the property transferre­d into her name now might be worth any amount of time and expense to remove any worry she has about losing her home.

Good luck.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? Some couples come to an agreement regarding home ownership as part of their divorce settlement.
DREAMSTIME Some couples come to an agreement regarding home ownership as part of their divorce settlement.

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