Anonymous wrote:Take pictures of every room, document blocked pathways, etc., to make your case in case it goes to court.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I DO NOT want to end up as a co-owner on a house with the hoarder. If I do, can I make them sell the house??
You can't make crazy people do anything--can't even make sane people do anything, most of the time. But you can disclaim inheritance.
Anonymous wrote:What is your relationship like with the hoarder sib?
Anonymous wrote:If you don’t own the house yourself outright, no, you cannot do anything legally to force the sale. Even if you are co-inheritors of your parents’ home, you can’t force the sale prior to your parents’ deaths. Even after they die, you would need to take costly legal action to force the sale and it probably would cost you more than just paying for upkeep and taxes for a decade or more.
Anonymous wrote:If you don’t own the house yourself outright, no, you cannot do anything legally to force the sale. Even if you are co-inheritors of your parents’ home, you can’t force the sale prior to your parents’ deaths. Even after they die, you would need to take costly legal action to force the sale and it probably would cost you more than just paying for upkeep and taxes for a decade or more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You cannot give a hoarder an empty space to fill as they will fill it with new trash. You give a specific date, with enough time to move things and several reminders of when it’s happening. Stay firm and who cares what this person says, it’s about your parents care not their junk.
Thank you. I suspect they would want to keep the house forever. If I wasn’t around, they probably would fill it with junk.
OP
You should change the locks once it is empty or stuff will pile up in there within a few weeks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Okay.
Do I tell the hoarder the date for the junk haulers? If not, they will call me multiple times a day to scream at me.
And do I care at all if sibling tracks down the junk haulers to get the stuff back? They might try that.
Sure, tell them the date, mostly so they can’t say later that you lied t them by not telling them.
Nope, don’t care at all if they get the stuff back for themselves.
The important thing is to get the house sold before there are tax consequences for your elderly parent.
Anonymous wrote:
I DO NOT want to end up as a co-owner on a house with the hoarder. If I do, can I make them sell the house??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who cares? Tell them they have until 1/31 and on 2/1 when they haven't done it, call the junk haulers.
I will have to deal with character defamation and screaming and 10 phone calls a day so I care.
OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn't read the whole thread, but I have a difficult sibling who I would like to maintain a relationship with but also need some boundaries. Texting is your friend. You do not need to respond immediately (or ever if the text is rude). Phone calls can go straight to VM and be dealt with when you feel like it.
Might I suggest email instead? The hoarder in my life has some OCDPD qualities and would text over and over if I did not respond right away. You should not have to silence your texts. Emails are quieter. You check when you are in the mood. You also have a written record that's easier to print out if the person flips out and says she never promised to move the stuff.
Yes, whether text or email, better to have as much in writing as possible. And include other siblings, if any.
I had to take a relative like this to court because of an estate/trust matter. She tried to tell the judge that I was lying and that she had never said certain things, but I had printouts of months of emails and texts in which she had made the statements she claimed were lies on my part. Bonus, the judge got to see how mean-spirited and nasty she could be in the texts and emails, in addition to the dishonest actions she was actually in court for.