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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

House buyer has moved stuff in before completion.

138 replies

AlinaRawlings · 15/03/2025 18:27

Hi everyone, apologies as this is long.

I have what I think is an unusual situation and I just wanted some opinions on my next move.
I split with my husband in 2023 and we have now divorced. We obtained a financial order by consent in November 2024 which stated I could occupy our marital home with our 3 children until it was sold with most of the proceeds going to me (we had other properties and capital that went to him). I am not on the mortgage and he is the legal owner so when we separated I obtained a right to occupy notice over the property. I agreed to remove this and it was removed on January 10th. He is very awkward and quite abusive and manipulative and our relationship is strained at best but I try to stay civil for the children.

He accepted an offer on the property within a week (November 7th) and he told me he will keep me updated the whole way through. On the 10th January he told me that the house was going to complete on 15th January. I was dumbfounded that he had not kept me up to date and told him there’s no way I could find a rented property (which I’d decided to go into until I’d saved a bit more to buy a home outright for myself and the kids) and move within 5 days. He was extremely abusive telling me I would lose us the sale. I had no access to his conveying solicitor who would not speak to me as I am not the legal owner. I then found a property and moved out within 14 days. I asked him when completion would then happen and he had no clue. This dragged on for weeks.

I then got a call from him on 7th March telling me I need to hand the keys to the buyer as she needed to move her stuff in (I still had the keys and still had belongings in there). I asked had he exchanged he said she refuses to exchange until she has the keys. I told him that that’s too risky for us both and could cause many issues. I then got a barrage of abuse and was told “she’ll call you to explain just give her whatever she wants”. She then calls me and tells me she’s a financial remedy judge (about 5 times) and how she’d never have touched the property had she known there was a matrimonial charge on it or known it was a “divorce property” (she was told this upon viewing). How her child had now lost his place at his preferred high school and that a condition of her offer was a completion date of 15th January due to her child’s school place. I asked why it hadn’t exchanged and she said she’ll do it today whilst I hand her the keys. I explained I still have stuff in there and that I’d need time to move it, she said I’ll stick it all in the garage for you. I felt bullied by both my ex and her and agreed as she repeatedly told me she’s a judge and can be trusted, that she’ll take on insurance liability, that she can’t get time off to move so needs the keys to move in the evenings, that she wants her electrician to come and put up light fittings, that she’s happy to pull out if I don’t acquiesce so I ended up hurriedly going up there grabbing what I could and handing her the keys over. I did ask when completion would happen and she said it’s out of her hands as a company is buying her home and they’re dragging their feet.

it’s now over a week later. I have asked my ex to keep my updated (we only speak on msg never face to face as it’s too volatile). He has ignored me. I still had her number from her calling me so I sent her a nice msg basically saying can she keep me in the loop as now she has the keys I have no idea when completion will be and my ex won’t tell me. She seemed very annoyed that I had msged her directly and told me she’s not the mediator between me and my ex. That this was all our fault for not completing on January 15th and that it will basically takes as long as it takes, she then asked me not to msg her again as she will only communicate with the legal owner and not to contact her again. She also threatened to remove her things and just pull out as it’s all stop stressful for her. I have also asked can his solicitor send proceeds from the property straight to me and he said his solicitor said as I’m not his client then no it will have to go to my ex then to me. This is a huge amount of money that I don’t trust him with. I have no money to obtain legal advice and I now don’t know the best course of action. I feel a bit like a fool for not demanding a completion date before handing over the keys but she’s certainly flexed her authority and knowledge as a judge over me.

Am I being unreasonable in asking the buyer to commit to a completion date and should I have give her the keys in the first place?

OP posts:
Lolapusht · 15/03/2025 23:37

OP, you can register Matrimonial Home Rights yourself and it doesn’t cost anything. Just download the form fill it in and send it to Land Registry

How to register MATRIMONIAL HOME RIGHTS

Needspaceforlego · 15/03/2025 23:51

Op you are being very nieve and far far too trusting, get intouch with your lawyer on Monday morning.

Nobody hands keys over without the cash getting handed over. It's the same as selling anything else.
You wouldn't let someone take your car keys, saying. I'll give you the money later.

Likewhatever · 16/03/2025 00:00

You cannot exchange without a completion date, it’s part of the contract. No completion date, no exchange.

Gremlinsateit · 16/03/2025 00:11

To echo PPs - you are being conned. Get that notice lodged again asap. Good luck!

RoastDinnerSmellsNice · 16/03/2025 00:37

OP, it sounds like you've been given some VERY good advice on here, please make sure you follow through and get YOUR OWN LEGAL ADVICE first thing on Monday morning. I absolutely hate to think of this abusive man conning you like this!

Also, stop worrying about the money you've had to spend, and may have to spend to get a good solicitor onside, without it, you'll have nothing anyway by the sound of things.

Dietingdaisy · 16/03/2025 00:37

Has she moved in to make her son’s school application? She said she’d missed the deadline but I wonder how transparent she is actually being with the local authority over dates…. Also, don’t you have to have an actual tenancy agreement or ownership of the property for the purposes of a school application? OP I’d be tempted to alert the local authority.

Devianinc · 16/03/2025 00:54

AlinaRawlings · 15/03/2025 18:27

Hi everyone, apologies as this is long.

I have what I think is an unusual situation and I just wanted some opinions on my next move.
I split with my husband in 2023 and we have now divorced. We obtained a financial order by consent in November 2024 which stated I could occupy our marital home with our 3 children until it was sold with most of the proceeds going to me (we had other properties and capital that went to him). I am not on the mortgage and he is the legal owner so when we separated I obtained a right to occupy notice over the property. I agreed to remove this and it was removed on January 10th. He is very awkward and quite abusive and manipulative and our relationship is strained at best but I try to stay civil for the children.

He accepted an offer on the property within a week (November 7th) and he told me he will keep me updated the whole way through. On the 10th January he told me that the house was going to complete on 15th January. I was dumbfounded that he had not kept me up to date and told him there’s no way I could find a rented property (which I’d decided to go into until I’d saved a bit more to buy a home outright for myself and the kids) and move within 5 days. He was extremely abusive telling me I would lose us the sale. I had no access to his conveying solicitor who would not speak to me as I am not the legal owner. I then found a property and moved out within 14 days. I asked him when completion would then happen and he had no clue. This dragged on for weeks.

I then got a call from him on 7th March telling me I need to hand the keys to the buyer as she needed to move her stuff in (I still had the keys and still had belongings in there). I asked had he exchanged he said she refuses to exchange until she has the keys. I told him that that’s too risky for us both and could cause many issues. I then got a barrage of abuse and was told “she’ll call you to explain just give her whatever she wants”. She then calls me and tells me she’s a financial remedy judge (about 5 times) and how she’d never have touched the property had she known there was a matrimonial charge on it or known it was a “divorce property” (she was told this upon viewing). How her child had now lost his place at his preferred high school and that a condition of her offer was a completion date of 15th January due to her child’s school place. I asked why it hadn’t exchanged and she said she’ll do it today whilst I hand her the keys. I explained I still have stuff in there and that I’d need time to move it, she said I’ll stick it all in the garage for you. I felt bullied by both my ex and her and agreed as she repeatedly told me she’s a judge and can be trusted, that she’ll take on insurance liability, that she can’t get time off to move so needs the keys to move in the evenings, that she wants her electrician to come and put up light fittings, that she’s happy to pull out if I don’t acquiesce so I ended up hurriedly going up there grabbing what I could and handing her the keys over. I did ask when completion would happen and she said it’s out of her hands as a company is buying her home and they’re dragging their feet.

it’s now over a week later. I have asked my ex to keep my updated (we only speak on msg never face to face as it’s too volatile). He has ignored me. I still had her number from her calling me so I sent her a nice msg basically saying can she keep me in the loop as now she has the keys I have no idea when completion will be and my ex won’t tell me. She seemed very annoyed that I had msged her directly and told me she’s not the mediator between me and my ex. That this was all our fault for not completing on January 15th and that it will basically takes as long as it takes, she then asked me not to msg her again as she will only communicate with the legal owner and not to contact her again. She also threatened to remove her things and just pull out as it’s all stop stressful for her. I have also asked can his solicitor send proceeds from the property straight to me and he said his solicitor said as I’m not his client then no it will have to go to my ex then to me. This is a huge amount of money that I don’t trust him with. I have no money to obtain legal advice and I now don’t know the best course of action. I feel a bit like a fool for not demanding a completion date before handing over the keys but she’s certainly flexed her authority and knowledge as a judge over me.

Am I being unreasonable in asking the buyer to commit to a completion date and should I have give her the keys in the first place?

If all these things are true then she’s abusing her authority and I’d get in touch with someone in legal. She’s threatening and abusive. She doesn’t sound like a professional. I’d call her out on it.

wombat1a · 16/03/2025 03:07

There is no way I would consider buying a house where the owners ex had a 'right to occupy' notice on it. Given how nasty most divorces are I could well imagine the owners ex doing all they can to mess with the owner. If the 'right to occupy' was no removed prior to anything I did that cost money (searches etc etc) I would simply pass on the property and look for another.

I am sure there are other ways you can put a notice on the house though that there is money from the sale that is due to you but without the RTO. I would get one of those registered asap so the buyers soliciters are legally aware you are due this money.

DiaryofaProvincialLady · 16/03/2025 03:31

AlinaRawlings · 15/03/2025 21:27

Thankyou everyone for your help, it is as I suspected a very risky thing that we have done. I think I’m going to give it until 25th and if I don’t have a firm completion date I will as somebody suggested get legal advice on possibly putting in another home rights notice.

If this property actually hasn’t exchanged then this is far worse than I thought. It’s such a nasty business selling and buying a house, it really does bring out the worst in people.

just to add I don’t even know her full name to check if she’s a judge and I wouldn’t want to get her in any trouble at this point anyway, as long as it alls goes through in the end then I’ll be happy, if not then it will be a different story. Hopefully this will work itself out in a week or 2, if not then I will certainly seek legal advice.

OK you've jumped the shark now. You are on are the verge of losing hundreds of thousands of pounds. Nobody is this naïve and passive.

Justhere65 · 16/03/2025 04:53

OhCalmTheFuckDownMargaret · 15/03/2025 22:34

How do you change the locks on someone else’s property? The house belongs to OPs ex. The sale is between her ex and the buyer. It isn’t OPs house to change the locks on.

I did some years ago. I also had my interest in the property registered with the Land Registry.

CarolinaWren · 16/03/2025 05:00

AlinaRawlings · 15/03/2025 18:44

To answer questions I am in the UK. He definitely doesn’t know her. I don’t think he’s up to anything sneaky but I do think he doesn’t care about the risks he’s putting us at and he doesn’t mind making my life as hard as possible. I am shocked at her attitude given that she’s a judge, she seems to say whatever she can to get what she wants and is firmly putting the blame on “us” (actually him I had nothing to do with it) that the house didn’t complete on 15th January, ignoring the fact we could have completed on 29th January and she’s still saying even now that there are pre exchange searches to be done.

is she a judge though, really? Or is she a grifter, pretending to be a judge?

allhappybunnies · 16/03/2025 06:16

You should register your "Beneficial Interest" in the property at the Land Registry .It will place a charge registering the financial claim you have ,rather than the right to occupy .

DaNightCreeper · 16/03/2025 06:18

Smartiepants79 · 15/03/2025 18:30

No, you shouldn’t have given the keys over to someone who does not yet own the house. She is essentially squatting. This is all very weird, not sure what your ex is up to.

This. any insurance on the property will be null and void too.

SALaw · 16/03/2025 06:37

If it had completed on 29 January what would you have done with your stuff that was still in the property? And why didn’t you do that at any point from then until now?

RightThenFred · 16/03/2025 06:41

INeedAnotherName · 15/03/2025 23:20

You are being conned.

Stop believing your ex. Stop believing a random stranger who cannot prove they are a judge, she could be his girlfriend. Stop believing a solicitor who is paid to shaft you because he is representing your ex, not you.

Get your own solicitor Monday morning. Speak to the estate agent Monday morning. Get the home rights notice added Monday morning too. Otherwise you are going to lose EVERYTHING. The house sale money should be going to the conveyancing solicitor - do they know they have to send it to you? Do they have your banking details? If it goes to ex then it's gone, and your paperwork will mean absolutely nothing unless you can afford to take him to court for years? Easier to protect yourself now than chase your diminishing rights later.

I repeat - you are being conned.

Exactly this. I also immediately thought the "judge" is his girlfriend, or someone he has put up to this. It's a bit much, isn't it, that the buyer haranguing you over the phone just happens to be a financial remedy judge?! It's exactly what he would invent to scare you and stop you questioning anything.

He may indeed have a legitimate buyer, but this "judge" lady ain't it. Her role is just to scare you out of the property. His end game: that you are gone and have given up all rights to the proceeds. He's very nearly there.

For the love of your children, get immediate help.

DaNightCreeper · 16/03/2025 06:44

YourAzureEagle · 15/03/2025 21:13

Having working in conveyancing, I have known of a few cases where a buyer began works / moved some goods in after exchange, but never before exchange.

In those two cases I can remember a contract was drawn up in which the buyer in effect became a short term Tennant for the two weeks, accepted all risk in loss and where required to insure the property.

Even in those exceptional circumstances there are still big risks to the seller of ending up with half finished work or squatting would be buyers to evict.

As has been said above, the OP does not have the right to change the locks - they keys should have been passed via the solicitor or estate agents, both of whom I would think would have advised against.

However, I still rather think the "judge" and the husband may be connected somehow.

I think the squatter and the ex are linked in more ways than a professional interest in your house OP.

Change the locks urgently. Get a 24 hour locksmith if need be. If she wants her stuff, go there and put it outside.

This stinks like rotting fish.

Mere1 · 16/03/2025 07:14

FOJN · 15/03/2025 18:36

I'm not sure if you are in the UK but typically the estate agent hands the keys to the buyer when the transfer of funds for the sale have been confirmed.

I think your ex is conning you in some way and you need to go back to the Solicitor who sorted out the financial order for you.

Edited

This

Musntapplecrumble · 16/03/2025 07:16

I'm really worried the ex and the "judge" are in this together..

RightThenFred · 16/03/2025 07:25

Musntapplecrumble · 16/03/2025 07:16

I'm really worried the ex and the "judge" are in this together..

Agree, of course they are, else why would an apparently successful man be going along with the completely bonkers notion of giving the key to someone who hasn't actually bought the house? I've never heard of anything so mad. It sounds like OP hasn't bought a property before, but anyone who has bought a property knows this is madness. No buyer would dream of asking, no seller would dream of agreeing. The only explanation is that he has cooked up this charade to intimidate the OP.

ByQuaintAzureWasp · 16/03/2025 07:35

I would move back in immediately. She's squatting. Is your husband doing this on purpose so he doesn't have to give you the money from the sale?

LadyBracknellsHandbagg · 16/03/2025 07:40

AlinaRawlings · 15/03/2025 18:27

Hi everyone, apologies as this is long.

I have what I think is an unusual situation and I just wanted some opinions on my next move.
I split with my husband in 2023 and we have now divorced. We obtained a financial order by consent in November 2024 which stated I could occupy our marital home with our 3 children until it was sold with most of the proceeds going to me (we had other properties and capital that went to him). I am not on the mortgage and he is the legal owner so when we separated I obtained a right to occupy notice over the property. I agreed to remove this and it was removed on January 10th. He is very awkward and quite abusive and manipulative and our relationship is strained at best but I try to stay civil for the children.

He accepted an offer on the property within a week (November 7th) and he told me he will keep me updated the whole way through. On the 10th January he told me that the house was going to complete on 15th January. I was dumbfounded that he had not kept me up to date and told him there’s no way I could find a rented property (which I’d decided to go into until I’d saved a bit more to buy a home outright for myself and the kids) and move within 5 days. He was extremely abusive telling me I would lose us the sale. I had no access to his conveying solicitor who would not speak to me as I am not the legal owner. I then found a property and moved out within 14 days. I asked him when completion would then happen and he had no clue. This dragged on for weeks.

I then got a call from him on 7th March telling me I need to hand the keys to the buyer as she needed to move her stuff in (I still had the keys and still had belongings in there). I asked had he exchanged he said she refuses to exchange until she has the keys. I told him that that’s too risky for us both and could cause many issues. I then got a barrage of abuse and was told “she’ll call you to explain just give her whatever she wants”. She then calls me and tells me she’s a financial remedy judge (about 5 times) and how she’d never have touched the property had she known there was a matrimonial charge on it or known it was a “divorce property” (she was told this upon viewing). How her child had now lost his place at his preferred high school and that a condition of her offer was a completion date of 15th January due to her child’s school place. I asked why it hadn’t exchanged and she said she’ll do it today whilst I hand her the keys. I explained I still have stuff in there and that I’d need time to move it, she said I’ll stick it all in the garage for you. I felt bullied by both my ex and her and agreed as she repeatedly told me she’s a judge and can be trusted, that she’ll take on insurance liability, that she can’t get time off to move so needs the keys to move in the evenings, that she wants her electrician to come and put up light fittings, that she’s happy to pull out if I don’t acquiesce so I ended up hurriedly going up there grabbing what I could and handing her the keys over. I did ask when completion would happen and she said it’s out of her hands as a company is buying her home and they’re dragging their feet.

it’s now over a week later. I have asked my ex to keep my updated (we only speak on msg never face to face as it’s too volatile). He has ignored me. I still had her number from her calling me so I sent her a nice msg basically saying can she keep me in the loop as now she has the keys I have no idea when completion will be and my ex won’t tell me. She seemed very annoyed that I had msged her directly and told me she’s not the mediator between me and my ex. That this was all our fault for not completing on January 15th and that it will basically takes as long as it takes, she then asked me not to msg her again as she will only communicate with the legal owner and not to contact her again. She also threatened to remove her things and just pull out as it’s all stop stressful for her. I have also asked can his solicitor send proceeds from the property straight to me and he said his solicitor said as I’m not his client then no it will have to go to my ex then to me. This is a huge amount of money that I don’t trust him with. I have no money to obtain legal advice and I now don’t know the best course of action. I feel a bit like a fool for not demanding a completion date before handing over the keys but she’s certainly flexed her authority and knowledge as a judge over me.

Am I being unreasonable in asking the buyer to commit to a completion date and should I have give her the keys in the first place?

If this buyer is in fact a judge she certainly appears to know nothing about conveyancing law. No solicitor would have advised your husband to hand over the keys to a property before completion, that is utter rubbish.

I really hope that he isn’t trying to pull a fast one here, but it sounds suspicious. As others have said you need legal advice asap, good luck.

B1indEye · 16/03/2025 07:42

This is like the will thread from a couple of days ago, is there a cultural factor. Is the judge the same lady that has been in court for modern slavery this week, not all judges are honest

Octav · 16/03/2025 07:51

She is squatting and you will have a job getting her out. Your husband needs to get her stuff out and the locks changed if not you are screwed.

MiniCooperLover · 16/03/2025 07:57

I would be going over to make sure she isn't living there. You say you get most of the capital from the sale so to me it sounds like he's deliberately mucking about on the sale to withhold funds from you

Fioratourer · 16/03/2025 07:57

I don’t think it matters what her job is she doesn’t get to tell you what to do. I would be wary your ex does know her. I would seek legal advice. In an abusive situations he will probably be doing whatever he can to gain control as he has lost it. This is his last way of controlling you other than through your children.