drgolddigger
Junior Member
What is the name of your state?What is the name of your state?Wyoming
After spending thousands of dollars to reach a "family settlement agreement" to avoid probating a small estate, all deeded and/or titled assets of the estate have been transferred equally to the four heirs and may be liquidated by consent of the four heirs. The trouble has always been with "one" of the four heirs who refuses to allow any resolution of the estate. A bankrupty attorney also represents another of the four heirs who may force partitioning of estate assets to liquidate on behalf of this heir. Meanwhile, the other two heirs have their hands tied in liquidating any assets of the estate...but must continue maintaining the financial liabilities of the estate. What can those two heirs do now, short of spending thousands of dollars more to force the matter back into probate?
After spending thousands of dollars to reach a "family settlement agreement" to avoid probating a small estate, all deeded and/or titled assets of the estate have been transferred equally to the four heirs and may be liquidated by consent of the four heirs. The trouble has always been with "one" of the four heirs who refuses to allow any resolution of the estate. A bankrupty attorney also represents another of the four heirs who may force partitioning of estate assets to liquidate on behalf of this heir. Meanwhile, the other two heirs have their hands tied in liquidating any assets of the estate...but must continue maintaining the financial liabilities of the estate. What can those two heirs do now, short of spending thousands of dollars more to force the matter back into probate?