Anonymous wrote:I am the executor and the house is probably about 40 percent of the estate. We haven’t started probate yet as we’ve trying to give sibling time to sort themselves out, grieve, figure out job…
Sibling seems to think parent would have wanted me to leave home available for as long as needed. I’ve been trying to be reasonable and don’t want to have to evict my sibling, but by the same token, having this hanging over me and my family is stressful because anything could go wrong with the home, and we’d have to then deal with it. I’m just ready to be done with this and move on. Is a year too short?
Anonymous wrote:
Sibling has had this current well paying job for about 6 years, before that was in and out of work, with housing paid for by employer or living with parent or friends. So never had reason to find own place. Did not pay rent and deceased parent’s account is now paying for carrying costs.
Will divided estate equally across siblings. What’s fair here? Sibling neither wants to move (long story, but job is unstable) nor buy out full ownership even though they have the savings to do so. Wants others to wait until some undetermined time - maybe another year or two - when sibling expects to be more stable in work/life.
Anonymous wrote:…
Sibling seems to think parent would have wanted me to leave home available for as long as needed.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like the sibling has an ADHD/ASD profile. Their career will never be stable. They are not able to sort through their parent's stuff, and they cannot plan (even though they think they can), which is why everything will always be in limbo for them.
So you'll have to exert more pressure, OP.
What you do is you call an estate sale firm to look over the items in the house. Most of it is likely very low value, but they can give you a quote and sell everything for you. They get most of the money in return, you and sibling get a little something. It's fair, since they're doing the work. Some estate sales also sell the homes, but you can do that with a realtor on your own.
You divide the proceeds, and your sibling does their own way, and hopefully won't need your assistance in the future.