Legal Question in Wills and Trusts in New Jersey

Estate Settlement

My mother passed away and her residence was left to the children under the rest and residue area of the will. Two of the siblings are interested in purchasing the house. One sibling wants to actually occupy the house and the other wants to own it for financial reasons. There are four additional siblings who all feel that the sibling who wants to actually occupy the residence should be able to purchase it. My question is, being the sibling that would like to buy the house as a principal residence is, do I have any recourse in this matter. I have been told the best solution is to flip a coin for the property, with additional solutions being sealed bids and going to court. I have also been told that a judge would probably rule that the property would have to be listed with a Real Estate Agency and sold to the highest non-family bidder. Any help in this matter would be greatly appreciated.


Asked on 3/01/03, 10:35 am

1 Answer from Attorneys

Walter LeVine Walter D. LeVine, Esq.

Re: Estate Settlement

As heirs you are equally entitled to the property, or to have it sold. In effect, you are partners in its ownership. As partners, you have the right to request partition of the property, which, essentially, is the right to have it evaluated and purchase the shares of the other partners. The Court would probably require it be appraised and evaluated. Once the Court has an appraisal, the value can then be used to determine the purchase price and allocation of shares thereof. Since this can be accomplished privately, there would be no broker commission, which would enlarge the share of the value going to all heirs. The Judge could also open it to bidding among the siblings, using the appraisal as an opening bid. He could also limit the time period for bidding and terms of sale, so I suggest having an appraisal and a standby mortgage commitment when you start the proceedings, using them as part of your action. Sorry the siblings cannot agree among themselves and that a court proceeding may be necessary to resolve this.

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Answered on 3/01/03, 12:12 pm


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