Re: Challenging a newly written will
- From: "A White" <nobody@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 31 May 2007 17:59:36 +0100
Mogga wrote:
On Thu, 31 May 2007 11:51:48 +0100, "A White" <nobody@xxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Or, alternatively, should I just write off the money that I paid
into the estate and accept what I am offered in the terms of the
will?
Thanks in advance for any advice you can offer.
Can you prove you paid the mortgage?
I can only prove that I transferred funds from my bank account to the joint
account of my mother and father. As that transfer always occurred five days
before the mortgage was due and was always the same amount as the mortgage
payment, it would seem to be obvious what the money was intended for.
Do you have argumentative brothers and sisters? Because you will the
minute you start to claim what is yours.M(Or what sane rational people
might think is yours because you paid for it)
You've made a mistake not getting your name on the mortgage when you
were paying it.
Yes, I agree. The problem is that there was a lot of emotional blackmail
happening and I just kept quiet for an easy life. In hindsight I should have
insisted on the legal agreement, but I know how my family works. If I had
done that I would have been seen as the bad guy for ever.
Your mother is I think being unfair. Do you want to fall out with her
and spend huge sums of money sorting it out?
I do NOT want to fall out with her. Neither do I want to spend large sums of
money on the matter. I just wish to protect what I see as my investment.
--
Andy White
.
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: Challenging a newly written will
- From: Norman Wells
- Re: Challenging a newly written will
- References:
- Challenging a newly written will
- From: A White
- Re: Challenging a newly written will
- From: Mogga
- Challenging a newly written will
- Prev by Date: Re: Vista
- Next by Date: Re: Computer expert wanted. Good salary.
- Previous by thread: Re: Challenging a newly written will
- Next by thread: Re: Challenging a newly written will
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|