You would have to get a lawyer and go to court - but you must have proof as well that your name is listed as part owner because unfortunately if it wasn't and she is not willing to tell that it will be up to you to prove.
no
Absolutely. If it was unsettled since the divorce, it still needs to be settled. If this property was owned by you during the divorce, its still half owned by your partner. You need to consult your divorce settlement papers to see if you owe her anything pertaining to that property.
Unless you conveyed a portion of the house or were legally married, the former partner has no interest in your property.
just put your half under his name
The cast of Double Your House for Half the Money - 2012 includes: Sarah Beeny as herself
NO. If you sign your half over to him, you lose 100% of your half.
suppose i don't want my common law partner to get half of my house
A good cash settlement is one in which both parties are satisfied with the result and the settlement is equitable. If a house is owned the house could be sold and the money split in two, or, if one of the spouses is willing to let the other spouse stay in the house then he or she could give the other one cash for their half of the house.
He lived about half his life in Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire and about half in London. He owned his house in Stratford but rented rooms in London most of the time. (He bought a London house just before he retired.)
Wyoming has half of its land federally owned and controlled.
i have a very small business with a partner and want to sell my share either to my partner or another buyer, how do i value my half ?
Since the parents are divorced, the house is owned as Joint Tenants (not Tenants in the Entirity), so as Joint Tenants, the surviving parent would own half the house with the two children owning the other half. If the house is owned as Tenants in Common, which isn't as likely, then when one person dies, the other person gets the entire house.