If you no longer want to own the property you can sell your interest to the other owner or to a third party if you can find someone who wants to take over your interest in the property.
If it is a large tract and you want to divide it you can arrange to have the tract surveyed and subdivided and an attorney can draft deeds to legally transfer the subdivided parcels to each respective owner. Each will become the sole owner of a smaller tract.
If you want to sell and the co-owner does not want to buy your interest then you must file a petition in court to have your land partitioned. (See related question link.)
If you have an undivided interest in property you cannot be forced to sell by the co-owners. Only a court can force a sale. Your parents would need to petition the court to partition the property. The court would divide the property if possible. If not possible then the property would be sold and the proceeds, after legal costs, would be divided amongst the co-tenants. A partition proceeding can be costly. However, your parents could sell their interest in the property to a third party who would then become your co-tenant in common.
Undivided interest means that each owner has the right to the use and possession of the entire property and one owner cannot divide the property so as to own their half, for example, as a separate portion.
Undefined: You cannot divide by zero
Un-di-vi-ded.
Get a court order to divide it
In the United States, your "spouse" was not legally married to you if she was still legally married to her previous husband. In order to be legally married to you she must have obtained a divorce, waited the statutory nisi period if any, and then married you legally. If she married you knowing that she was already married then she violated the law.In a community property state, that property would not be community property. You may need to seek a court order if you cannot divide the property by a mutual agreement. You should consult with an attorney who can review your situation and explain your rights and options.In the United States, your "spouse" was not legally married to you if she was still legally married to her previous husband. In order to be legally married to you she must have obtained a divorce, waited the statutory nisi period if any, and then married you legally. If she married you knowing that she was already married then she violated the law.In a community property state, that property would not be community property. You may need to seek a court order if you cannot divide the property by a mutual agreement. You should consult with an attorney who can review your situation and explain your rights and options.In the United States, your "spouse" was not legally married to you if she was still legally married to her previous husband. In order to be legally married to you she must have obtained a divorce, waited the statutory nisi period if any, and then married you legally. If she married you knowing that she was already married then she violated the law.In a community property state, that property would not be community property. You may need to seek a court order if you cannot divide the property by a mutual agreement. You should consult with an attorney who can review your situation and explain your rights and options.In the United States, your "spouse" was not legally married to you if she was still legally married to her previous husband. In order to be legally married to you she must have obtained a divorce, waited the statutory nisi period if any, and then married you legally. If she married you knowing that she was already married then she violated the law.In a community property state, that property would not be community property. You may need to seek a court order if you cannot divide the property by a mutual agreement. You should consult with an attorney who can review your situation and explain your rights and options.
To divide and assign in just proportion; to divide and distribute proportionally; to portion out; to allot; as, to apportion undivided rights; to apportion time among various employments.
If a Partition decree is issued and the property cannot be divided the court appointed commissioner will sell the property and will divide the net proceeds according to each person's interest after all legal fees and costs have been deducted.
You might divide father's property with sisters by selling the property and dividing the money equally between the siblings. You could also ask each sister what they would like to have from the father's property.
You could add the prefix un- and the suffix -ed to make the word "undivided."
u cant
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