1) If a house is bought in one partners' name i.e. the wife, and it is a second marriage with both partners having offsprings from previous marriages, do the offsprings from the husbands' side have any right to claim anything from the house when there is a death of either partner?
2) The house is bought in the wifes' name only so does the husband have to sign to give permission to sell and what happens if he is no longer living in the house and can't be contacted?
Odd questions I know but when I bought the house I was told by the notaire that my husbands' kids would not be entitled to inherit anything from it on the death of either party and if I died first then my kids would only inherit the property when my husband died. Very confused, I bought the house in my name to try to avoid any problems for my kids as it was all my cash that went into it and I have no intention of letting someone elses' kids who I don't know, have never met getting any share whatsoever of it.
Joined on 15/06/2005
Cologne and Ardèche
Posts 1,232
Re: House ownership and rights
teabag wrote:
Odd questions I know but when I bought the house I was told by the notaire that my husbands' kids would not be entitled to inherit anything from it on the death of either party and if I died first then my kids would only inherit the property when my husband died.
Why do you think anyone here would know better than a French expert - aka a Notaire.
As for the first part, and from what I understand your husband's children would be most unlikely to have any claim on a property that legally has nothing to do with him. The second part is certianly possible under certain circumstances and I would guess that foresaid notaire would have been aware of, or indeed constructed, these circumstances.
1) If a house is bought in one partners' name i.e. the wife, and it is a second marriage with both partners having offsprings from previous marriages, do the offsprings from the husbands' side have any right to claim anything from the house when there is a death of either partner?
2) The house is bought in the wifes' name only so does the husband have to sign to give permission to sell and what happens if he is no longer living in the house and can't be contacted?
Odd questions I know but when I bought the house I was told by the notaire that my husbands' kids would not be entitled to inherit anything from it on the death of either party and if I died first then my kids would only inherit the property when my husband died. Very confused, I bought the house in my name to try to avoid any problems for my kids as it was all my cash that went into it and I have no intention of letting someone elses' kids who I don't know, have never met getting any share whatsoever of it.
To Andyh4 Thank you for that reply but I don't think there was any need to have been quite so abrupt. I don't consider that others on this board would know better than a French 'expert', I only wanted other peoples' views. Unfortunately not all Notaires seem to read from the same hymn sheet. A Notaire in a different department informed one lady that she could not sell the house she owned without the permission of her husband and because he wanted her to keep the house he refused to sign anything. They are not divorced, separated or even thinking about it. He is away a lot on business so she wanted to move to a smaller house, closer to a village but although the house is in her sole name she can't sell it without his say so. Although she asked at the time of purchase if there would be any problems on selling, she was repeatedly told that the house was in her sole name. It's only since trying to sell that she has come up against problems.
I have heard of absent children trying to claim rights to property that was nothing to do with their parent, mostly French, but I assumed that if they were trying to make any claim then there may have been some loophole for that to even be considered. Hence the reason for the question.
I am still not too comfortable about the house selling. If something is in my name and I have paid for it, then I should be allowed to dispose of it as I wish and not have to ask permission to do so.
To parsnips, your very kind reply much appreciated I certainly was not made aware by the Notaire that my husband would need to sign anything for me to sell my own house and I did ask several times but the whole thing seems very biased and unclear.
Joined on 23/08/2004
Real Virtual French Person & Moderator - Lot (46)
Posts 11,295
Re: House ownership and rights
teabag wrote:
A Notaire in a different department informed one lady that she could not sell the house she owned without the permission of her husband and because he wanted her to keep the house he refused to sign anything. They are not divorced, separated or even thinking about it.
That is because they are married and the house is the marital home (domicile familial). Under French law, she cannot deprive her husband (it works the other way too) of his marital home and needs his agreement to sell, even though it is her property. Clair
the elements of disbelief are very strong in the morning Breakfast - Frank O'Hara
Thanks Clair for that info. Only trouble is that in that ladys' case she had already bought another smaller place so she hadn't actually deprived him of anything. The only reason she put the house in her name was apparently because he had another house somewhere in France which he sold and she didn't have to signe to give permission. Gets complicated this law business, I think each department operates slightly differently anyway but c'est la vie. Never mind, we choose to live here so we have to play by the rules.
Oh don't start me on this again. yesterday I applied for power of attorney to the notaire as I am going home to UK next week, and don't want to be there at final signing. Again I had to give form to my estranged husband or ask him to be at the signing although he has never lived in the house. I brought it with my money and he has never given me a penny when I lived with him, for a whole year. I don't use his name, don't want to know anything about him. I still had to grovel. The napoleonic laws are disgusting. Good luck