quincy
Senior Member
The court ordered the BF to stay away from the GF, though, and the GF is in possession of the house. Hence, the BF is excluded from the house. The GF has not refused the BF entry (or maybe she has) but it is the court order rather than the GF that prevents him from entering the home.The Court did not order GF to stay in the house. That was her choice, and that choice affected the ouster.
You have the right to change the locks on your door. But if you exercise that choice in order to exclude a cotenant, that is ouster.
The mortgage obligations only accrued because GF refused to sell, denying BF his equitable right to sell property he owned.
A court cannot oust one cotenant in favor of another - to do so would violate either or both of the countracts clause or the takings clause of the constitution.
The mortgage obligations are there because BF and GF decided to purchase a home together and sign the mortgage papers together, making them equally liable for the payments on the loan.
The BF and the GF have created a mess that they now need to clean up - and, as Silverplum said early on, the mess is best cleaned up with the help of separate attorneys in their area who will represent their separate interests in the joint property.
Again, the BF can potentially recover damages, that represent his loss of value of the use of the home (e.g., possibly recover rent payments made to a landlord), this once the property is sold and the proceeds divvied up. But if he is not paying on the mortgage loan during his forced absence from the home, then the GF can claim those payments.