kenberg, on 2011-January-09, 21:54, said:
This is for Tim, Rain posted while I was writing. I'll get to Rain tomorrow.
Tim, I got you off track a little here I think by originally saying "assessed" when I meant "appraised". The concern is not (at least not immediately) the taxes. The desire is to have a reasonable estimate of what the selling price would be, and to get this without putting the house up for sale to the public.
As anyone working their way through this thread can probably guess, the outline is that two people, A and B, now own a house together and will subsequently each own a separate house. There are more than the usual reasons, which I will not elaborate on, for one of them to keep the current house. Some money will change hands.
There is a possible market solution that goes like this: A offers to buy B out for x dollars, with the added feature that B can say "No, but I will buy you out for that price". Sort of like the old way to cut a cake fairly: One person cuts, the other person chooses. However, it turns out that A prefers to stay in the house, B prefers a different house. Both agree that this is the preferred solution. One can use more sophisticated fair distribution theory approaches to handle this wrinkle, but that is not necessarily best.
Hopefully it goes like this: Somehow they agree on the value of the house, they subtract the remaining mortgage, that difference is the equity, they divide that by 2, and that is the amount that A gives to B. So far, everyone agrees. But now the value of the house must be agreed to.
I believe that we are now pretty much in agreement that the house value will be taken to be the value of the appraisal that the bank does as preparation for a new mortgage. The bank has three appraisers that they use, and for each appraisal one appraiser is picked randomly. When I first posted, I was worried that this whole arrangement was coming undone due to the earlier higher appraisals so I was testing the claim that the bank's new appraisal is a reasonable basis by getting views from you all. I didn't want to propose this approach if people familiar with appraisals were then to say "No, that's crazy, everyone knows appraisals are way off". It does not have to be a perfect method, it has to be good enough so that all parties agree that they are willing to go forward on that basis. I think we are coming to that.
You all have helped. Thank you. As mentioned there are some complexities but I plan to take Phil up on his offer to consult with me as soon as I am prepared to describe my understanding of these complexities.
Btw: A and B are not me and Becky, we are fine.
Tim, I got you off track a little here I think by originally saying "assessed" when I meant "appraised". The concern is not (at least not immediately) the taxes. The desire is to have a reasonable estimate of what the selling price would be, and to get this without putting the house up for sale to the public.
As anyone working their way through this thread can probably guess, the outline is that two people, A and B, now own a house together and will subsequently each own a separate house. There are more than the usual reasons, which I will not elaborate on, for one of them to keep the current house. Some money will change hands.
There is a possible market solution that goes like this: A offers to buy B out for x dollars, with the added feature that B can say "No, but I will buy you out for that price". Sort of like the old way to cut a cake fairly: One person cuts, the other person chooses. However, it turns out that A prefers to stay in the house, B prefers a different house. Both agree that this is the preferred solution. One can use more sophisticated fair distribution theory approaches to handle this wrinkle, but that is not necessarily best.
Hopefully it goes like this: Somehow they agree on the value of the house, they subtract the remaining mortgage, that difference is the equity, they divide that by 2, and that is the amount that A gives to B. So far, everyone agrees. But now the value of the house must be agreed to.
I believe that we are now pretty much in agreement that the house value will be taken to be the value of the appraisal that the bank does as preparation for a new mortgage. The bank has three appraisers that they use, and for each appraisal one appraiser is picked randomly. When I first posted, I was worried that this whole arrangement was coming undone due to the earlier higher appraisals so I was testing the claim that the bank's new appraisal is a reasonable basis by getting views from you all. I didn't want to propose this approach if people familiar with appraisals were then to say "No, that's crazy, everyone knows appraisals are way off". It does not have to be a perfect method, it has to be good enough so that all parties agree that they are willing to go forward on that basis. I think we are coming to that.
You all have helped. Thank you. As mentioned there are some complexities but I plan to take Phil up on his offer to consult with me as soon as I am prepared to describe my understanding of these complexities.
Btw: A and B are not me and Becky, we are fine.
ok my goal is too make as much money as possible or even more.....
My goal is not to be fair or bla bla bla.
I hire the guy who gives me the highest quote. I hire the best Lawyer is really step one.
None of this is about fairness.
Fairness just will just confuse the Math and you know the Math.