Hi mj
So if I understand things correctly there is a house which is valued at say £140,000 and you have a mortgage of £60,000, leaving equity of £80,000 which your Trustee is claiming is vested in him in its entirity, due to the fact that the property is registered in your sole name.
As you were bankrupted in 2001, your Trustee had until 31 March 2007 to commence proceedings against you for the recovery of said equity. Has he commenced any proceedings against the property for possession and sale yet? If not, then he may have lost his right to deal with the property in any case. This is an important point to check out as it could make a fundamental difference to the outcome of your case.
Assuming that the Trustee has secured his interest in the property, you then need to consider the strength of your mother's and wife's claims - for which you will need to take legal advice.
Does your mother actually live with you at the property? If she does, then she may well be successful in claiming a beneficial interest in the property as a result of her contributions towards the mortgage. She will need to demonstrate actual payments made directly to the mortgage company, between 1991 and 2001, and you will need to satisfy your Trustee and/or ultimately the Court that these payments were made with the intention of her obtaining an interest in the property, rather than just helping you out. These matters can be quite complex and costly to bring and defend, and you must take specialist advice from an insolvency experienced lawyer who will be able to review your case and advise whether you have any chance of success.
With regard to your wife, who you married in 1999, you will also need to show that she has contributed to the general running costs and upkeep of the property in order to successfully claim that she has an interest.
It would help your case if you have valuations of the property at 1991, 1999, 2001 and now - to demonstrate the shares that each party may have contributed to. A good surveyor ought to be able to provide retrospective comments, and I would have thought your Trustee would have already discovered these details - especially given the costs he has incurred.
Bottom line is that if the Trustee has correctly secured his interest in the property, and your mother's and wife's claims are not held to be valid - and you can only confirm this by agreement with the Trustee or a Court Order, then you will need to pay over approximately £140,000 to discharge bankruptcy debts and costs in full. There is insufficient equity in the property to support a payment at this level.
Hope this helps for now. Key thing to check is what action has the Trustee taken against the property. You may find that he has simply run out of time! Who is the Trustee and which firm is he from?
Regards, Melanie Giles, Insolvency Practitioner for over 20 years.
For further details contact me at
http://www.melaniegiles.com and view my IVA blog at:
http://melaniegiles.blogs.iva.co.uk