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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To not sell my home for the benefit of my stepkids?

748 replies

jaicobain · 07/01/2023 15:34

I was never able to have children of my own. I was with somebody for 20 years, had all the treatments, and only ever had miscarriages. He became abusive and I left in my mid-40s, that was that. I am lucky in that I bought my house before he came along. I’m 57 now, and have come to terms with not having DC, but it’s still a great source of sadness to me.

My 2 nieces were born in my 30s, and I adore them. They were a great comfort to me, I’ve always been close to my sister so as a result was close to them. I am their Godmother. Of course they couldn’t be a substitute to my own DC but we have such a close relationship. When they were teenagers, they moved in with me for a few months whilst Dsis struggled with depression. Then a couple of years later my elder niece moved back in for 4 months at age 17 due to rebellious behaviour that Dsis wasn’t coping with. They are now both brilliant young women, and both have babies. They aren’t particularly well-off, and have struggled with the cost of living recently. I’ve been very vocal of the fact that they will inherit my house. Maybe a mistake to tell them that but they are greatful and not entitled at all.

I am in great health and expect to be around for the forseeable, and have always planned to leave my house to my sister, or my nieces if she passes before me. My sister is younger than me, but has ill-health and chronic conditions that have worsened as of late. She is not at deaths door or anything but has told me full-well that she doubts she’ll make 70.

I have a husband now, married 5 years, I have moved in with him. I have a tenant in my property. The problem that has arisen is that he wants us to buy a holiday home in Spain, but doesn’t want to downsize his large Victorian house to fund it (worth £500,000+, bought in the 80s in an area that got gentrified) because he wants his 2 sons to inherit it. He is snobbish about the area of my house (one of the not so nice areas of the city, but it’s where I grew up and I’m fond of it!), and is incredibly vocal about it. He thinks I should ‘get rid’ of my house and buy us the holiday home with the money. I have asked him why he doesn’t just downsize his 4-bedroom, it’s just the 2 of us and his 4 granddaughter’s are pre-teens/teens so they don’t even come and stay anymore. And it’s always the same response, he wants his sons to inherit it and the hypothetical holiday home that he expects me to sell my beloved home to fund.

He actually said that since I don’t have DC and now live with him I don’t need the house. As somebody who tried for years to have kids, this hurt me a lot. He also fails to respect my close relationship with my nieces, and has actually said I should prioritise his adult kids over my 2 nieces. Prioritising his kids would mean selling my house to fund the holiday home so that he doesn’t have to downsize his big house that they are due to inherit.

I am finding the whole thing incredibly upsetting and I feel like he doesn’t respect me or my family. He’s made many a nasty comment about my sister’s mental health issues and has no sympathy for her physical health issues which he says are her own fault for smoking, it’s like her considers her and my nieces to just be worthless. I will add that the holiday home is all him, I am really not bothered and would rather just go on nice holidays around Europe without the stress of buying and maintaining a holiday home.

OP posts:
CatLandlady · 08/01/2023 17:49

I’m in a not-the-same but similar situation. My long term partner put continual pressure on me to sell the house that I owned before we got together. We have recently separated and I would have been in the s*%t had I not kept it. The fact he expects his kids to inherit your house is unreasonable. Do not sell.

Ellflet · 08/01/2023 17:49

Totally agree.

SpiralHecate · 08/01/2023 17:52

YANBU

I agree with the all the advice to consult a solicitor and make sure your property is safe from him. I don't see this marriage as lasting as it sounds like the 'honeymoon' period is over and he's now showing his true colours. Plan a safe exit strategy.

TrixieMixie · 08/01/2023 17:53

I hope you have a will. If not, all your assets will go to him if you predecease him and none to your nieces. If he predeceases you then you get the first £270k, half the rest and his kids divide the other half between them.

AHG1234 · 08/01/2023 17:54

Get rid of him.

HauntedPencil · 08/01/2023 17:55

I hope you leave him but otherwise please seek legal advice to ensure your property is suitably ringfenced in the event you pre decease him.

Tessabelle74 · 08/01/2023 17:55

DO NOT SELL YOUR HOUSE! If he wants a holiday home, let him sell up to buy it and leave THAT to his kids! Write an agreement that you have no claim on it, and he and his sons have no claim on your home. What a prick!

Bogasphodel · 08/01/2023 17:56

To add to that I have an aunt who wasn’t able to have kids who had a very emotionally and financially (and possibly physically as he attacked an other female family member) abusive husband. When my grandma died the other siblings bought my aunt out of her share though she inherited a cottage attached to the main farmhouse which she kept as a holiday house. She later bought the family farmhouse off my Mother when my parents moved for a significantly reduced price under the understanding it would be left to her nieces and nephews on our side to keep the farm
together. A few years later her husband persuaded her to sell it and keep the cottage so they could travel in Europe more. She has now had a stroke and is fairly comatose and not with it in a home paid for by the council whilst her husband continues his life as if she doesn’t exist but prevents her family from visiting her. (Interestingly there is a link between strokes and been knocked about) My round about point is you have no idea what might happen to you and men can be utterly shitty so look after yourself!!

KarenandFour · 08/01/2023 17:57

I’d say two words to him. Second one is ‘off’

Rawandreal74 · 08/01/2023 17:58

He’s demonstrating controlling behaviour
set your boundaries and if he doesn’t like it walk away
so sorry you’re having to deal with this type of behaviour

Toomuchtrouble4me · 08/01/2023 17:59

See a solicitor and get that house to your nieces even though you live with him.

Mollymoostoo · 08/01/2023 18:00

jaicobain · 07/01/2023 15:40

@HermioneWeasley.

Becuase he doesn’t get why I’d leave anything to my nieces in the first place rather than his kids. If I did sell my home to buy the holiday home with him (joint ownership) he’d expect it to be left to just his kids.

This is about blood ties. You want your hard work to go to your family. His children are not your children so why would you sell your house and his kids benefit.
If you sell your house, you will have nothing and the rules abroad are not the same as in the UK. If you divorce you may have no rights.

daemonologie · 08/01/2023 18:02

He sounds like a bad man. Don't let him cook you anything or even make you a cup of tea.

Lindos · 08/01/2023 18:02

Please leave this mean. He is a nasty abusive bully.

Fernticket · 08/01/2023 18:02

OP. I am in a similar position vis a vis neices. They were in your life before your DH and stepkids. I don't have a DH or Stepkids, but if I did, my neices would inherit my property.

HerRoyalGoddess · 08/01/2023 18:03

As previous posters have said, make sure your will is iron-clad, the fact he's demanding that you sell your house is firing up so many red flags I'm worried for you. Honestly just dump the whole man in the bin.

Hopeistaysane · 08/01/2023 18:03

Oh my life I am utterly gob smacked. Is this really the kind of man you want to spend your life with? He sounds like a nasty piece of work. I think you have some thinking to do. He doesn’t value your sister, your family if your views, how do you know he actually values you. Over my dead body would I sell that house if I were you, you may yet need it when you get rid of him. What a CF he is!

billy1966 · 08/01/2023 18:03

There is absolutely no way a man who really loved you would so viciously hurt you.

Your sister sees him clearly and he despises her for it.

He really is vicious.

Be very careful.

Tell him nothing and plan your exit.

WickedSerious · 08/01/2023 18:04

Idontevenknow · 07/01/2023 15:42

You are absolutely correct. He wants the holiday home, he can finance it. You are under no obligation to fund a holiday home you aren't interested in.

Precisely,time for him to put his money where his mouth is.

fetchacloth · 08/01/2023 18:04

Idontevenknow · 07/01/2023 15:42

You are absolutely correct. He wants the holiday home, he can finance it. You are under no obligation to fund a holiday home you aren't interested in.

Absolutely right there - in OP's shoes I would be saying the same thing.

YDBear · 08/01/2023 18:05

Come on OP, you know this guy is a complete arsehole and his attitude is indefensible. You know what has to be done; I assume you just need a bit of moral support to get it done. Hope you've found it here.

pargaluvva04 · 08/01/2023 18:06

Get rid of him not your house x sounds a bit of a tool x

FfayeN · 08/01/2023 18:07

The only way I would entertain this, if you actually wanted to, which you don't, would be to both release the same amount of equity in your houses to fund the holiday home. That way it would be 50/50 leaving both your individual assets alone

Mumof3confused · 08/01/2023 18:08

He sounds awful and I wonder what’s in it for you in this relationship at all? I would get legal advice tbh. And don’t sell your rental property. Once it’s incorporated in shared ‘marital’ property with him, it’s all up for grabs in a divorce if it ended up going down that route in the future. Of course you should leave that property to whoever you want. But if the assets are mixed with his rather than kept separate as it is now, his family may have a claim on it - he would for sure go after everything he could possibly get his hands on.

meetmynewusername · 08/01/2023 18:08

Divorce him OP, and take half his money with you. He sounds like a git.