What Does Fair Mean In A Family Land Fight
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When siblings inherit a house, the hardest part is not the paperwork, it’s the stalemate. One person wants to keep the property, another wants to sell, and someone ends up paying the taxes and mortgage while the argument drags on. We sit down with attorney Anthony Rabreno to explain the North Carolina partition process that can finally move an inherited property dispute toward a clear outcome.
We walk through the two types of partition you’ll hear in court: partition in kind, where the property is physically divided into separate lots for each heir when that’s actually feasible, and partition by sale, where the court orders the property sold and each co-owner receives their share of the proceeds. We also cover why the court typically uses a neutral, court-appointed commissioner to handle appraisals, surveys, and the sale itself, helping reduce bias and keep the process fair.
Then we get into the questions people ask us every day in elder law and estate administration: Can attorney fees be shared? What about reimbursement for expenses like taxes or mortgage payments? Is a sibling buyout possible before things escalate? If you’re dealing with inherited land, a family home, or co-owned real estate in North Carolina, this conversation gives you a practical map of your options.
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