castleview
I'm on my 103rd attempt to grown
- Joined
- Mar 4, 2004
- Messages
- 5,509
I am part of a trust for a small island. My grandfather and his brother bought a small island off the coast of Maine about 60 years ago. They put it in trust so that it has to stay in the family. Current owners are my mother, her sister, and some of my mom's cousins, and my late uncle's children. When my mother passes, her share will be "divided" between my brother, sister, and I. Eventually 100 people will own this darn island. We can't build on it, and no one can do anything without permission of all the owners. It's a pain. The property taxes are kind of high for an uninhabited island owned by a dozen people, so we have been helping my mother pay the taxes for the last few years. If I sign my "share" over, then my relations will be responsible for any financial obligations I had, and that doesn't seem fair. But it also isn't fair for me to have to pay for a piece of land I haven't seen since I was 6! So I can understand why you'd want to unload a joint piece of property!
DH has been there with his dad's family. Eight children (plus their spouses), 40 acres of farmland in a town that became a desirable suburb. When DH's dad got sick, DH and his sibs knew the land had to be sold to pay for his dad's medical. Half his aunts and uncles were against it (of course most of them had already built on their share of land and didn't want to lose the woods or out on the money it was now worth). Fortunately, the grandmother was still alive and told the others to sell their share. It was messy and he doesn't speak to some of them anymore which is fine, but he's very thankful the trust didn't move onto the next generation.