Quizzes & Puzzles6 mins ago
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by MrFrosty. 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.Hi sorry seem to have put the question but no details the joy of trying to do these thugs on an iPhone.
Anyway I have been with my girlfriend for a year. Well officially I have been with here for 4 months. When I first met her she wanted to stay single. However she would come over to mine yet say things like this house could be half mine. Now I have said to her that's not right and it has causedany arguements and she hasn't said it since. Until last night when she jokingly said if we for married I'd have half your house if we got divorced and then after she said we don't have to be married for me to get half your house. Just her saying that has made me doubt why she is with me. She said it was a joke but i'm 29 saved hard for 7 years to get my house deposite and have had the house for 2 years paid all the mortgage and bills myself which has been hard. The thought of her just taking half scares me. Now if she moved in what would she be entitled too?
Anyway I have been with my girlfriend for a year. Well officially I have been with here for 4 months. When I first met her she wanted to stay single. However she would come over to mine yet say things like this house could be half mine. Now I have said to her that's not right and it has causedany arguements and she hasn't said it since. Until last night when she jokingly said if we for married I'd have half your house if we got divorced and then after she said we don't have to be married for me to get half your house. Just her saying that has made me doubt why she is with me. She said it was a joke but i'm 29 saved hard for 7 years to get my house deposite and have had the house for 2 years paid all the mortgage and bills myself which has been hard. The thought of her just taking half scares me. Now if she moved in what would she be entitled too?
many a true word spoken in jest...I'd run a mile or get a legal agreement drawn up before she moves in...she wouldn't be entitled to anything at first but as time went on she would be deemed to have contributed to the household and may at that point have a claim on any increase in value from the time she arrived....different if you have kids together though...
Nothing really. There is no such thing as common law these days.
This may help.
http://www.contractsa...mon-law-marriage.html
This may help.
http://www.contractsa...mon-law-marriage.html
If she moves in....NOTHING.
Keep all bills in your name....make sure everything goes out from your account as it is now. Charge her rent....
She can walk away with what she walked in with.
Don't marry her....
But if you do...unless you have children then not much is different. She sounds like the deluded sort that believes there is such thing as common law....there isn't.
Keep all bills in your name....make sure everything goes out from your account as it is now. Charge her rent....
She can walk away with what she walked in with.
Don't marry her....
But if you do...unless you have children then not much is different. She sounds like the deluded sort that believes there is such thing as common law....there isn't.
You cannot claim what it not yours....
Like I've said before...if she renovates the house for you...yes she has an interest in it. If she pays her keep...then no she hasn't.
If it was the case that partners could claim other peoples houses just because they 'lived' with them....could you imagine the mayhem?
Like I've said before...if she renovates the house for you...yes she has an interest in it. If she pays her keep...then no she hasn't.
If it was the case that partners could claim other peoples houses just because they 'lived' with them....could you imagine the mayhem?
Unfortunately, ummmm, that is exactly what people do do! Claiming a beneficial interest by way of a constructive trust ("we agreed we would own the house but never got round to putting me on the title") or a resulting trust ("I paid for the new kitchen, conservatory etc") is the "new divorce". Whatever the merits of her claim, it could cause a whole load of costs and heartache just disproving her claim. Although a document drawn up acknowledging that on a split "we each take what we came with" will not prevent a claim, it makes it significantly less likely.