Bru
Well-Known Member
See posts #16 and 18.
I have! they are correct for co-ownership, the OP has already mentioned that he and his partners are joint owners
See posts #16 and 18.
Is the situation analogous to home ownership? Because for homes, if you are joint owners, the property automatically passes to the survivors on the death of one party. Same with joint bank accounts. .
In fact there are very similar issues in home ownership - you can be Joint tenants or Tenants in Common.Is the situation analogous to home ownership? Because for homes, if you are joint owners, the property automatically passes to the survivors on the death of one party. Same with joint bank accounts. I have recent experience of this; we bought houses for myself and my wife and for my two daughters. Of course, as husband and wife, the appropriate arrangement for us was joint ownership, but my daughters had a harder choice to make.
In fact there are very similar issues in home ownership - you can be Joint tenants or Tenants in Common.
That's about right.Thanks - I'd forgotten the exact terminology. Let me make sure I've got this right: Joint tenants - survivor takes all and the property can only be sold by consent of all tenants; Tenants in Common - the shares are separate and can be disposed of individually without the consent of other tenants, with the shares simply treated as part of the estate of deceased tenants, to be disposed as their will (or intestacy rules) dictates.