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Reply to "Relative misrepresented that they bought a house"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Wow, OP. My husband and I shopped for our car together. I am the primary user of the car. We could have both been on the financing, but my husband has a remarkable credit score, whereas mine was just regular good at the time. He made all the payments, but in all practicality, it's my car. I drive it daily. We share plently of other expenses. For instance, I generally pay for all the groceries, doesn't mean the groceries aren't also 'his.' Geez.[/quote] You are *married* and the car purchased during your marriage is marital property. If he dies his property automatically goes to you. If you were unmarried he would need to have a will stating that the car went to you and, remember, one false move and he could take that car away from you and change his will. If he owned a house before you married and the house was in his name only that property belongs to him, and only to him, to do with as he sees fit.[/quote] You are a pedantic dickwad. SO your concern is that the ownership tatus of the property is legally correct? "Good news, we purchased this this house as a fee simple absolute!" You're just looking to defend a crappy position, and doing a bad job of it. [/quote] No. You either own a property or you do not. You either are married or you are not. You have either graduated from college and have a degree or you do not. Walking around wishing that these things were true does not make them true. If your "husband" (not really married) dies and the house that he has rightful ownership passes to your "MIL"(not really your MIL because you aren't really married) then you will have some gigantic problems that you would not have if you actually DID own your house.[/quote] You’ve gone far afield here. Property can easily pass to a partner through a will or a trust. No idea why you’d try to dig into the minutia of someone else’s financial arrangements. Let it go. [/quote]
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