Meet the Other Phone. Protection built in.

Meet the Other Phone.
Protection built in.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

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:
amonsteronthehill · 07/01/2023 16:01

I'd divorce the asshole, personally.

He doesn't sound like a nice or good person.

SomethingOriginal2 · 07/01/2023 16:01

YANBU and please write a will to protect your assets.
He wants to claim your wealth to give to his kids and its bang out of order.
Yours is yours to do with and give to as you please. If he wants a holiday home he can fund it himself.

Glitterbiscuits · 07/01/2023 16:02

No! Don't think about it.

Please make sure you have an up to date Will and a Power of Attorney. POA could be very important if you are incapacitated

notapizzaeater · 07/01/2023 16:02

You can leave your half to whoever you want to if you've put it in a legally binding will. He sounds a knob tbh !

Lindy2 · 07/01/2023 16:02

He wants a holiday home but wants you to fund it for him.

He wants to protect his chosen beneficiaries but not yours.

This really sounds very uncaring and rather greedy.

Please keep your house OP. If you choose not to live with him in the future it gives you a home to move back to. You need to make sure you are protected.

creamcoffee · 07/01/2023 16:03

no,
you have already promised the house
why should you let them down?
make a new will

LetUsPonce · 07/01/2023 16:05

Assuming you write a new will, you also need to make sure it is kept somewhere he cannot destroy it and pretend it never existed.

Poppyblush · 07/01/2023 16:07

And you married him why…..???

Probablymagrat · 07/01/2023 16:08

sounds like a great deal for him and his kids! If you want to stay with this controlling man for goodness sake update your will to ensure your assets go where you want them to.

Thehobbit2013 · 07/01/2023 16:08

If his sons are going to inherit his house op, where would you live if he were to die. Think you need to ensure your own future is secured too.

BliainNua · 07/01/2023 16:10

Don't sell your house, you never know when you might need it. If he's leaving his house (where you currently live!) to his sons, where is he expecting you to live when he dies? They could easily kick you out.

EasterIsland · 07/01/2023 16:10

YANBU

If you stay with this greedy unreasonable man, please have an absolutely WATERTIGHT will and maybe explain in the will why you are leaving your estate to your sister, not you partner.

I hope you’re not married to this man …

Rainbowqueeen · 07/01/2023 16:11

Get a will in place pronto that sets out your wishes.

Don’t give in to him on this and buy the holiday home. Others may be able to confirm but I’ve seen on here that selling homes in Europe by people who have inherited them is a long and complex process. Don’t do that to your nieces. Tell him you’ve made your decision and you won’t discuss it any more

Bestcatmum · 07/01/2023 16:12

Do NOT sell your house. It is your only security. I've been divorced twice and each time it happened they've tried to rip me off, claim what they are not entitled to. You can't trust anyone you always need to preserve your assets.

cruisecrazy · 07/01/2023 16:13

Please OP DO NOT SELL YOUR HOUSE! What a nasty piece of work you are married to. Make sure your Will is cast iron and he gets nothing but your sister and nieces get everything. If it were me I would divorce him and take him to the cleaners. That would teach him.

usedtolovenaps · 07/01/2023 16:16

Awful of him. You should absolutely not sell your house to but a holiday home in Spain.

EffortlessDesmond · 07/01/2023 16:16

Just tell him it's not going to happen, and make sure your wishes are clearly expressed in an up to date will.

Hellno44 · 07/01/2023 16:16

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.

It's not him money. It's not his inheritance.

lunar1 · 07/01/2023 16:17

Everything you have written about him is appalling and you deserve so much better.

I had a great auntie who passed away a few years ago, we had the best relationship, one of the most important in my life. She didn't have her own children, but I like to think our relationship was important to her. We spoke once or twice a week from when I was a young teen until I was 40 when she passed.

Never let this man undervalue your importance in your nieces lives.

Justcallmebebes · 07/01/2023 16:17

Please don't take legal advice from this thread. A lot of it is very wrong

MintJulia · 07/01/2023 16:19

theswoot · 07/01/2023 15:36

YANBU and none of the way he is acting sits right with me. Hang on to your house and make sure your will is up to date!!

This.

Do not even think of selling your house. You would end up completely dependant on him, and he really isn't behaving well. He's resorted to bullying you. Horrible!

Plus the Spanish holiday home market is notoriously unpredictable.

jimmyjammy001 · 07/01/2023 16:19

You've married him now, so pritty sure half of your house is his anyways and half of his is yours, as the only children in the relationship are his, when you pass away all your assets will go to him and his children anyways, unless you have a will that states otherwise?
I personally would be eyeing up the divorce route as I would not want to spend the rest of my life with someone like this and be in a position like this

UthredofBattenberg · 07/01/2023 16:19

How incredibly hurtful to say those things. He keeps everything for his children and you give up everything because your family don't matter? Fuck that.

I'd be seriously reconsidering my relationship after those comments. I'm not sure I could forgive that.

I'd also be seeing a solicitor ASAP because I'd want to make damn sure my nieces would be my house if I died first. Otherwise he'd inherit your house and then this would also be passed to his sons, your nieces wouldn't get anything. I'd get that legally clarified and iron clad, regardless of any assurances he'd give you about "doing right by your nieces". He won't. That much is crystal clear.

FrostyFifi · 07/01/2023 16:20

Divorce him, he's awful. As his home is worth considerably more than yours you should come out quids-in which will further benefit your nieces in the long run.

HolliDays · 07/01/2023 16:20

Put your own home into trust for your nieces, with the proviso that when your current marriage breaks down, you can move back into your home until the end of your life / until you need funds for end of life care. Your present and very selfish DH won't be able to touch a trust fund set up for your nieces.