Legal Question in Real Estate Law in Illinois

My husband and I are living in a house that my mother in law owns. Because of our bad credit the house is in her name she lives with us in apartment down stairs. If anything happens to her. Is there a way we can still have the house to live in even though its in her name. If anything were to happen to her we pay mortgage to he at this time.r now but our credit is bad so we are not able to put in our name


Asked on 8/30/10, 2:10 pm

4 Answers from Attorneys

Charles Dobra Charles Wm. Dobra, Ltd.

Two ways come readily to mind:

1. (and the cheapest, really) Place the land in a Land Trust.

2. If she has a will, you should be the beneficiaries of same.

GOOD LUCK!

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Answered on 9/04/10, 2:20 pm
Walter Palmer Law Office of Walter Palmer

You might also aka a "Land Sales Contract" aka "Contract for a Deed". You might find a form contract at an office supply store. You make payments similar to mortgage payments and when you have paid for the house it is yours.

There is a risk because the contract is with her and if she passes away before the sales price she has set is reached, you will have to contend with the estate. The estate is another term for your husband's siblings. If he is an only child you are "golden". Asking to be named in her will is an excellent idea. As always, keep a record of what you pay and when, under all circumstances.

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Answered on 9/04/10, 6:38 pm
Burton Padove Indiana and Illinois Lawyer, Burton A. Padove

A simple question with a not so simple answer. There are four or five ways to approach this that immediately come to mind as you have multiple issues here. How to handle the mortgage when the MIL dies, and how to make sure the house becomes yours upon her death. At this point you probably should have a land trust with yourselves named as successor beneficiaries and a land installment contract that is not to be recorded. Being named in a will would also be a good thing to do. Bottom line is see an attorney as there are ramnifications if thsi is not done properly.

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Answered on 9/08/10, 4:10 am

1. If your husband is without siblings he would inherit the house when she dies even without a will.

2. She could give you a long term lease...

3. The real problem is the loan. Putting you on title somehow, directly or indirectly, may require the lender's consent or the loan could be "called" and that is a risk. Frankly, her death could call the loan and therefore simply continuing to pay the loan after her death may be a risk too. Then again, if you are paying the loan and let's say taxes, you'd want to claim them as deductions for your own taxes and while the property tax side is easy, getting the lender to change the annual 1098 for loan interest to you is not.So partly it's time to build good credit; for that it's never too late. And partly a time for your mother in law, if she's willing, to talk to her lender and see if you two can be added to title and the loan - or at least title -- then how you handle the tax breaks would be up to you. That's something you'd want to have some legal help with. If you can't use the tax breaks, then the arrangement could be for you to pay her rent and she pays the bills and gets the breaks.

The response given is not intended to create, nor does it create an ongoing duty to respond to questions. The response does not form an attorney-client relationship, nor is it intended to be anything other than the educated opinion of the author. It should not be relied upon as legal advice. The response given is based upon the limited facts provided by the person asking the question. To the extent additional or different facts exist, the response might possibly change. Attorney is currently licensed to practice law only in the State of Illinois. Responses are based solely on Illinois law unless stated otherwise.

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Answered on 9/10/10, 10:54 am


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