California Co-Owner Buyout Dispute Attorney

OVERVIEW

When co-owners of California real estate cannot agree on whether to sell, keep, refinance, or buy out each other, the dispute can quickly become expensive and personal.

These disputes often involve siblings who inherited property, unmarried partners who bought a home together, former romantic partners, family members, real estate investors, or business partners who no longer agree on what should happen next.

A buyout may sound simple: one owner keeps the property and pays the other owner for their share. In reality, the difficult questions are usually:

  • What is the property worth?
  • What percentage does each owner really own?
  • Should the buyout be based on gross value or net equity?
  • Who gets credit for mortgage payments, taxes, insurance, repairs, or improvements?
  • Should one owner get charged for living in the property?
  • What happens if one owner refuses to sell, refinance, sign documents, or cooperate?
  • Is a partition action needed to force a resolution?

Vokshori Law Group represents California property owners in co-owner buyout disputes, partition actions, appraisal disputes, reimbursement claims, accounting disputes, and real estate litigation involving jointly owned property. Our firm is based in Los Angeles and handles real estate litigation matters throughout California.

Co-Owner Buyout Disputes We Handle

Co-owner buyout disputes usually arise when two or more people own real estate together and no longer agree on what should happen with the property.

Common disputes include:

  • One co-owner wants to sell, but the other wants to keep the property
  • One co-owner wants to buy out the other, but they disagree on value
  • One co-owner wants to be bought out, but the other refuses
  • A sibling wants to buy out inherited property from other siblings
  • Former unmarried partners disagree over the home after a breakup
  • One co-owner has been living in the property while the other has moved out
  • One co-owner paid the mortgage, taxes, insurance, repairs, or improvements
  • One co-owner collected rental income and did not share it
  • One co-owner refuses to cooperate with refinance, sale, appraisal, or escrow
  • The parties disagree over whether title reflects the true ownership arrangement
  • A partition action has been filed and the parties are evaluating a buyout
These disputes are part legal, part financial, and part practical. The goal is usually to either structure a fair buyout, force a sale, defend against an unfair demand, or use a partition action to move the dispute toward resolution.

Can You Force a Co-Owner to Buy You Out in California?

Usually, you cannot directly force another co-owner to personally buy your interest just because you want out.

That said, a co-owner generally does not have to stay trapped in co-ownership forever. If the parties cannot agree on a buyout, sale, refinance, or continued ownership arrangement, a partition action may be available to force a resolution.

In plain English, a partition action is a lawsuit used to end co-ownership of real estate. Depending on the facts, the result may be a sale of the property, a court-supervised buyout process, a division of the property, or another remedy allowed by law.

This distinction matters. The law may not let you simply command your co-owner to buy you out. But it may give you leverage to end the deadlock through partition.

Can You Force the Sale of Co-Owned Property?

Often, yes. California law generally gives a co-owner the right to partition jointly owned real property unless that right has been validly waived or another legal exception applies. Code of Civil Procedure section 872.710 provides that, except as otherwise provided by statute, partition of concurrent interests “shall be as of right unless barred by a valid waiver.” That means one co-owner usually cannot block a sale forever just because they do not want to sell, cannot afford to buy out the other owner, or prefer the status quo.
The California Court of Appeal addressed this principle in LEG Investments v. Boxler, 183 Cal.App.4th 484. In that case, the court rejected the argument that a right of first refusal in a tenancy-in-common agreement amounted to a waiver of the right to partition. The case is important because it reinforces that waiver of partition is not lightly implied. For co-owner buyout disputes, this matters because partition pressure often creates the path to a serious buyout discussion. If one owner refuses to negotiate realistically, the other may be able to file a partition action and force the issue.

Adverse Possession in California Boundary Disputes

Adverse possession is often raised in boundary disputes, but it is difficult to prove in California.

Generally, a person claiming adverse possession must show possession that is actual, open and notorious, hostile to the true owner’s title, continuous and uninterrupted for the required period, and accompanied by payment of property taxes assessed against the property claimed. California Code of Civil Procedure section 325 addresses adverse possession where the claim is not founded on a written instrument, judgment, or decree, and identifies circumstances such as substantial enclosure, cultivation, or improvement. It also includes the important tax-payment requirement.

That tax requirement is often a major obstacle in boundary disputes. If a neighbor simply had a fence in the wrong place but never paid taxes on the disputed strip of land, an adverse possession claim may fail.

In Mehdizadeh v. Mincer, a California Court of Appeal addressed a dispute involving a fence that had been built many years earlier in the wrong location. The claimant could not prove adverse possession because he had not paid property taxes on the disputed property. The trial court tried to grant a broad prescriptive easement instead, but the appellate court rejected that result because the easement was so broad that it effectively deprived the record owners of use of their own property.

The practical point is simple: an old fence does not automatically mean your neighbor owns the land.

How a Court-Supervised Buyout Can Work in a Partition Action

A co-owner buyout can happen privately by agreement, or it can arise inside a partition action.

Under California’s Partition of Real Property Act, the court may determine the fair market value of the property and, in certain cases, allow eligible cotenants to buy out the interests of cotenants who requested partition by sale.

Code of Civil Procedure section 874.316 addresses how the court determines fair market value. The statute provides that, unless the parties agree to value or another method of valuation, the court generally determines fair market value by ordering an appraisal. The appraiser must be a disinterested California-licensed real estate appraiser. After the appraisal is filed, parties receive notice and may object, and the court ultimately determines fair market value after a hearing.

Code of Civil Procedure section 874.317 then addresses the cotenant buyout process. The purchase price is generally based on the value of the entire parcel determined under section 874.316, multiplied by the selling cotenant’s fractional ownership interest.

The basic sequence may look like this:

  1. A co-owner files a partition action.
  2. The court determines whether partition is available.
  3. The court determines the property’s fair market value.
  4. Eligible cotenants may have an opportunity to buy out the interests of cotenants seeking partition by sale.
  5. If the buyout does not occur, the case may proceed toward sale or another partition remedy.

This process can be powerful, but it is technical. The details matter, including whether the statute applies, who requested partition by sale, the valuation evidence, the ownership percentages, deadlines, financing ability, and whether there are separate accounting or offset issues.

How Is the Co-Owner Buyout Price Calculated?

The starting point is usually the property’s fair market value. But that does not always answer the real question.

A 50% owner is not automatically entitled to 50% of the gross market value in every practical settlement. The more important question is often:

50% of what, after what deductions, credits, reimbursements, and offsets?

For example, assume a property is worth $1,000,000 and has a $600,000 mortgage. A 50% owner is usually not looking at 50% of $1,000,000 as a practical buyout number. The starting point may be the equity, not the gross value. Then the parties may still need to evaluate closing costs, liens, repair credits, reimbursement claims, rental income, occupancy, and other adjustments.

In a statutory buyout process, CCP section 874.317 ties the purchase price to the value determined under CCP section 874.316 and the selling cotenant’s fractional interest. But in private negotiations, the final number often depends on a broader settlement analysis.

A proper buyout strategy should consider:

  • Fair market value
  • Appraisal methodology
  • Mortgage balance
  • HELOCs or other liens
  • Property taxes
  • Insurance
  • HOA dues
  • Repairs
  • Improvements
  • Rental income
  • Occupancy by one co-owner
  • Sale costs avoided by private buyout
  • Attorney’s fees and litigation costs
  • Referee fees and broker commissions if the case proceeds to sale
  • Whether the property can actually be refinanced
  • Whether the buying co-owner can close by a firm deadline

The biggest mistake is treating the buyout as a simple percentage calculation without analyzing the financial history of the property.

Reimbursements, Credits, and Offsets in Co-Owner Buyout Disputes

Many co-owner disputes are not really about whether the property should be sold or bought out. They are about accounting.

One owner may say:

“I paid the mortgage for years.”

The other may respond:

“You lived there rent-free the entire time.”

One owner may say:

“I paid for repairs and improvements.”

The other may respond:

“You collected rent and never shared it.”

One owner may say:

“I put more money down.”

The other may respond:

“Title says we are equal owners.”

California courts have broad equitable power in partition cases. Code of Civil Procedure section 872.140 provides that the court may order allowance, accounting, contribution, or other compensatory adjustment among the parties according to principles of equity.

That statute is important because partition is not always a simple mechanical split. The court may need to account for what each side contributed, what each side received, and what adjustments are fair under the circumstances.

Potential reimbursement and offset issues include:

  • Down payment contributions
  • Mortgage principal payments
  • Mortgage interest payments
  • Property taxes
  • Insurance
  • HOA dues
  • Necessary repairs
  • Capital improvements
  • Maintenance expenses
  • Rental income received
  • Property management work
  • Exclusive occupancy by one co-owner
  • Damage, waste, or failure to maintain the property
  • Refinance proceeds
  • Payment of liens
  • Sale expenses
  • Litigation-related partition costs

Not every claimed expense automatically becomes a credit. The court or parties may look at whether the expense benefited the property, preserved title, increased value, was necessary, was agreed to, or was offset by other benefits.

Can One Co-Owner Get Credit If the Other Lived in the Property?

Sometimes, but this issue is more complicated than people expect.

A co-owner who moves out does not automatically lose ownership rights. At the same time, a co-owner who stays in the property may face arguments about fair rental value, especially if that owner is also asking for contribution for mortgage, taxes, insurance, or repairs.

Hunter v. Schultz, 240 Cal.App.2d 24, is an important California case on this issue. The Court of Appeal recognized that, in partition and other equitable proceedings between cotenants, the court may account for the reasonable value of occupancy when adjusting claims between the parties. The case is often cited for the point that rental value may be used defensively as part of the equitable accounting between cotenants.

The practical point is this: exclusive occupancy can matter, but it does not always create a straightforward rent claim. The facts matter, including whether there was an agreement, whether one owner excluded the other, who paid property expenses, whether the property generated income, and whether the occupancy value should offset claimed reimbursements.

Negotiated Buyout vs. Partition Lawsuit

A negotiated buyout is usually cleaner, faster, and less expensive than a fully litigated partition sale.

A private buyout may avoid:

  • Broker commissions
  • Referee fees
  • Court delays
  • Appraisal disputes
  • Public sale uncertainty
  • Litigation costs
  • Loss of family property
  • Risk that neither co-owner controls the final sale outcome

But a bad buyout agreement can create new problems if it does not address the details.

A strong co-owner buyout agreement should usually address:

  • Purchase price
  • Appraisal method
  • Mortgage payoff
  • Liens
  • Credits and offsets
  • Reimbursement claims
  • Rent or occupancy claims
  • Closing deadline
  • Financing contingency, if any
  • Escrow process
  • Deed transfer
  • Possession and move-out date
  • Personal property
  • Repair condition
  • Release of claims
  • Default remedies if the buyout does not close

If the parties cannot agree privately, a partition lawsuit may be necessary to create leverage and force the dispute toward sale, buyout, or judgment.

Common Co-Owner Buyout Scenarios

Sibling Buyouts of Inherited Property

Sibling buyout disputes are common after a parent dies and leaves a house to multiple children.

Typical problems include:

  • One sibling lives in the property
  • One sibling wants to keep the family home
  • One sibling wants to sell and receive their share
  • One sibling paid taxes, insurance, repairs, or mortgage expenses
  • Siblings disagree over appraisal value
  • One sibling demands more than their ownership share
  • One sibling refuses to cooperate with sale or refinance
  • Emotional attachment causes unrealistic settlement positions

These cases often require a mix of legal strategy, valuation analysis, and practical negotiation. If a voluntary buyout cannot be reached, partition may be needed.

Unmarried Couples Who Own Property Together

Former unmarried partners often face difficult co-owner buyout disputes after a breakup.

Common issues include:

  • Unequal down payment contributions
  • One person paid most of the mortgage
  • One person moved out
  • One person stayed in the property
  • Title does not match what one person claims was agreed
  • One person wants to keep the property
  • One person cannot qualify for refinance
  • The parties disagree over reimbursement or occupancy credits
  • These cases may involve partition, breach of agreement, resulting trust, constructive trust, accounting, or other equitable claims depending on the facts.

Real Estate Investment Partner Disputes

Investment property disputes often involve co-owners who bought rental property, development property, or commercial real estate together.

Common disputes include:

  • One partner controls the rents
  • One partner manages the property
  • One partner refuses to sell
  • One partner wants to refinance
  • The parties disagree over repairs and capital improvements
  • One partner claims unpaid management expenses
  • The property has debt, tax issues, or deferred maintenance
  • The parties disagree over whether to sell on-market or through a private buyout

These cases require more than a title review. The financial records, rental history, ownership documents, operating agreements, and communications may all matter.

Parent, Child, and Family Title Disputes

Some co-owner buyout disputes are really disputes over whether title reflects the true ownership arrangement.

For example:

  • A child was added to title for financing purposes
  • A family member was added for estate planning reasons
  • One person claims they were never intended to be a true owner
  • One person contributed money but was not added to title
  • A deed was signed based on trust, family pressure, or misunderstanding
  • The parties disagree over whether the property should be divided according to title or according to contributions

These disputes may overlap with quiet title, resulting trust, constructive trust, fraud, elder financial abuse, or breach of contract claims.

Mistakes to Avoid Before a Co-Owner Buyout

Before agreeing to a buyout, avoid these common mistakes:

  • Do not agree to a number without analyzing debt, liens, and equity.
  • Do not rely only on Zillow, Redfin, or an informal estimate.
  • Do not sign a deed before payment is secured.
  • Do not ignore mortgage payoff or refinance requirements.
  • Do not leave reimbursement claims vague.
  • Do not ignore who paid taxes, insurance, repairs, or improvements.
  • Do not forget rental income or occupancy issues.
  • Do not assume title percentage always answers the final payout question.
  • Do not agree to a buyout deadline without proof of financing ability.
  • Do not overlook possession, move-out, and personal property issues.
  • Do not use a handshake agreement for a six or seven-figure real estate transfer.

A co-owner buyout should be documented carefully. Otherwise, the parties may resolve one dispute and create another.

How Vokshori Law Group Helps With Co-Owner Buyout Disputes

Vokshori Law Group helps California property owners evaluate, negotiate, and litigate co-owner buyout disputes.

Our services may include:

  • Buyout strategy consultation
  • Review of deeds, title documents, loan records, and ownership agreements
  • Analysis of ownership percentages
  • Review of mortgage, tax, insurance, repair, and improvement payments
  • Appraisal and valuation strategy
  • Demand letters
  • Negotiation with co-owner or opposing counsel
  • Accounting and offset analysis
  • Partition complaint preparation
  • Lis pendens analysis where appropriate
  • Settlement and buyout agreement drafting
  • Escrow and deed transfer coordination
  • Litigation through buyout, sale, or judgment

The goal is not always to rush into court. The goal is to determine the best leverage point, the likely financial outcome, and the most efficient path to end the co-ownership dispute.

If you are trying to buy out a co-owner, get bought out, force a sale, avoid an unfair buyout, or resolve a disputed co-ownership arrangement, contact Vokshori Law Group to discuss your options.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I force my co-owner to buy me out in California?

Usually, you cannot directly force a co-owner to personally buy your share just because you want out. But you may be able to file a partition action, which can force a resolution through sale, buyout procedures, or another court-approved partition remedy.

Can I force the sale of jointly owned property?

Often, yes. California Code of Civil Procedure section 872.710 generally provides that partition of concurrent interests is available as of right unless barred by a valid waiver or legal exception.

What happens if one co-owner wants to sell and the other does not?

If the parties cannot agree, the owner who wants out may file a partition action. The case may result in a sale, a buyout, or another court-supervised resolution depending on the facts and applicable law.

How is a co-owner buyout price calculated?

The starting point is usually fair market value, ownership percentage, and equity. In a statutory partition buyout process, the purchase price is generally tied to the court-determined value of the property and the selling cotenant’s fractional ownership interest. In private negotiations, the final number may also account for mortgage balance, liens, reimbursements, offsets, occupancy, and sale costs avoided.

Is a 50% owner always entitled to 50% of the property value?

Not necessarily. A 50% owner may have a 50% title interest, but the practical payout may depend on debt, liens, sale costs, reimbursement claims, credits, rental income, occupancy issues, and other equitable adjustments.

Do I get credit for mortgage, taxes, insurance, or repairs I paid?

Possibly. California Code of Civil Procedure section 872.140 gives the court broad authority in partition cases to order accounting, contribution, allowance, or other equitable adjustments among the parties. Whether a specific payment results in a credit depends on the facts and evidence.

Can I charge my co-owner for living in the property rent-free?

Sometimes occupancy value can be considered, especially as part of an equitable accounting. But this is not always a simple rent claim. The court may consider whether there was an agreement, whether one owner excluded the other, who paid expenses, and whether occupancy value should offset claimed reimbursements. Hunter v. Schultz is often cited in this area.

What if my co-owner refuses to agree to an appraisal?

If the dispute is in litigation and the statutory process applies, the court may determine fair market value through the procedures in Code of Civil Procedure section 874.316, including appointment of a disinterested licensed appraiser unless the parties agree to value or another valuation method.

Can siblings use a buyout to avoid selling inherited property?

Yes. Siblings who inherit property can often resolve the dispute through a private buyout, refinance, or settlement agreement. If they cannot agree, a partition action may create a path toward buyout or sale.

What happens if a co-owner agrees to buy the property but cannot get financing?

The agreement should address that issue. A buyout agreement should include deadlines, proof of funds or loan approval requirements, escrow procedures, default remedies, and what happens if the buying co-owner cannot close.

Do I need a partition action to force a buyout?

Not always. Some buyouts can be negotiated privately. But if the other owner refuses to cooperate, demands an unrealistic number, blocks sale, or will not sign necessary documents, a partition action may be needed to create leverage and force a resolution.

What should be included in a co-owner buyout agreement?

A strong buyout agreement should address price, valuation, liens, mortgage payoff, credits, offsets, closing deadline, financing, escrow, deed transfer, possession, release of claims, and what happens if the buyout does not close.

Speak With a California Co-Owner Buyout Dispute Attorney

A co-owner buyout dispute is not just a disagreement over price. It is a legal and financial separation of ownership. The final number may depend on value, mortgage balance, liens, improvements, repairs, taxes, insurance, rental income, occupancy, credits, offsets, and the leverage created by a partition action.

Vokshori Law Group represents California property owners in co-owner buyout disputes, partition actions, reimbursement disputes, accounting claims, and real estate litigation involving jointly owned property.

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