Legal Question in Wills and Trusts in Massachusetts
Lawyers are taking it all
My sister wants to sell my late mother's house, which I have been living in and renovating. She hired a lawyer to sue for partition, I agreed to sell the property. I listed the property with a Realtor in January 1999, accepted the first offer, buyer reneged, accepted another offer in March 1999. Now that all the work has been done, I received a letter from yet another attorney that the court has appointed him to sell the property. I contacted this attorney to say that the property was already in contract to be sold (and for a good deal more than the court stated) and also notified the probate court of this. The attorney called my Realtor and told her that I was no longer allowed to represent the estate and he would be taking over. We are not wealthy people, the sale of the house will be split four ways after all commissions. Can he step in after all the work has been done and claim a fee? Will I still be reimbursed for my expenses for renovations, insurance, etc.? My sisters and brother have paid for nothing concerning my mother's property including cleaning out her personal effects. Are they at all responsible for any of the property taxes, insurance premiums, legals fees for this house?
3 Answers from Attorneys
Re: Lawyers are taking it all
If a house is sold under a court ordered sale, the court may appoint a master or
receiver to
sell the house. All claims for expenses must be ruled upon by the judge.
Alan Pransky
Law Office of Alan J. Pransky
20 Eastbrook Road
Re: Lawyers are taking it all
In whose name (legal title) was the house? (I can
look up the deed if you tell me the name and address.)
If it was
your mother's name, then the next question is this: who
was the appointed executor of your mother's estate? Did
she leave a will? Someone has to be assigned legal
responsibility for her estate and it appears that it
wasn't you and you didn't ask for it to be; you should
have been notified (were you not?) before any major actions
being taken by other lawyers or by the court were decided
upon.
Luckily, in Probate law, it's not too late to start getting
involved, while the assets are still undistributed. But each
procedure / issue / case in probate that you let slip by,
you lose ground on.
You do need a lawyer, probably, to handle the
intricacies of probate procedure
to get your objectives accomplished for you.
If you do
get a competent probate lawyer involved soon enough,
you might:
1) keep the other lawyer's fees in check, 2) get something
for all that you put into the house to make it saleable,
in all likelihood.
However, don't be ready to battle yet! That lawyer may only have
been appointed to make sure that you didn't sell the house and
run off with all the assets by yourself. Also, that lawyer's fees
need to be reasonable and will have to be approved by a judge; you
probably can be heard on that issue by the judge prior to his issueing
orders to pay that lawyer, and you would certainly
point out that you fixed up the place and the buyer was found before
that lawyer jumped in. (Get your written documentation of all that
together and have it handy. Make sure you can prove also what you told
that lawyer and when.)
Similarly, you can petition the judge to
pay your 'fees' for the care you took of the house, although you should
probably have gotten the court's permission first before you did all
that work.
There are bigger fish to fry than whether one or another lawyer gets any
fees out of this from your sister's point of view, don't you think?
Now, what city do you live in / what Probate court are you in?
Do you want to call me to answer some of the above questions and
figure out where you stand?
I don't charge for the phone call.
tel. (617) 527-0050.
fax -1763
or write to me!
Stuart Williams
Law Offices of Stuart J. Williams
21 Walter St.
Newton, MA
02459-2509
e-mail: [email protected] or [email protected]
Re: Lawyers are taking it all
The answer depends on who owns the house, and what the court has ordered. If you owned the house, then you had the right to list it and sell it. If you did not own the house, then you had no authority to sell the parts that did not belong to you. When your sister sued for partition, did you answer the complaint? Did you go to court? If not, the Court may have ordered the sale on your sister's terms.
Worst case, you could end up paying a realtor's fee for a transaction that will not go through, and one fourth of the fee as your share. You also could be sued by your buyer if the transaction does not go through. You could concieveably have to pay your siblings in the end, and be liable to your buyer if you cannot make that transaction work. You need to speak with an attorney to see if your liability can be minimized. You could end up paying many thousands of dollars. Do not delay. I can speak with you, at (508) 822-777. No fee to just talk about your problem.
Thomas Workman
Law Offices of Thomas Workman
41 Harrison Street, Taunton, MA