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Selling a House During a Divorce in Arizona

Tue 9th Feb, 2016 Arizona Community Property Laws

Arizona Law on Selling a House During a Divorce in Arizona

Many people question whether you can sell your house during a divorce in Arizona. Fortunately, the Arizona Court of Appeals answered that question for us. In Saxon v. Riddel, 493 P.2d 127 (Ariz. Ct. App. 1972), the Court of Appeals considered whether a divorce court had the authority to order a spouse to sell her interest in real estate before the final divorce decree was entered by the court.

Husband and Wife were married and lived in Arizona. In 1971, Wife filed an action for divorce against her husband. The final divorce trial was set for a date in 1972, and the court issued an order preventing Wife’s husband from selling or giving away any of the couple’s assets. Wife, her husband, and Husband’s own father shared an ownership interest in a mobile home park.

A company called Mobile Home Communities made an offer to buy the mobile home park that Wife’s husband and his father considered advantageous, but Wife refused to sign off on the sale. Husband asked the divorce judge to order Wife to sign the documents necessary to sell the mobile home park. When the trial court entered an order requiring her to cooperate with the sale, Wife appealed that decision to the Arizona Court of Appeals.

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Wife argued that the divorce court did not have jurisdiction to order a party to sell property in which she had an interest before the entry of the divorce decree. The Court of Appeals first reviewed the rights of a co-owner of the property in Arizona to force the sale of the property against the wishes of another co-owner.

At common law, the only way one co-owner could do this was by bringing an action for partition. The Court noted that the fact that the co-owners are married does not change this rule in Arizona. The state removed all of the common law limitations that applied to a married woman’s selling her property.

Therefore, a husband does not have any greater right in Arizona to convey his wife’s interest in real property that he would have if the couple were not married.

Forcing the Sale of a Home During a Divorce in Arizona

Forcing the Sale of a House During a Divorce in Arizona.

Next, the Court considered whether a pending divorce between the co-owners enlarges the right of one co-owner to force a sale. The Court discussed A.R.S. § 25-318, that allows a judge to order the sale of the property as part of a divorce decree. Since the judge in the Saxon case was not entering a divorce judgment when it ordered the sale, the Court found that this section was not applicable. It then considered A.R.S. § 25-315.

This statute provides: “The court may make temporary orders respecting the property of the parties or the custody of the children of the parties, as may be necessary.” The Court found that, under this statute, a divorce court could only “make temporary orders respecting the property” when it was necessary to preserve the couple’s interest in the property.

A House Would Need to Be Endangered to be Lost Through, For Example, a Pending Foreclosure

For example, it could order the property sold if the community was about to lose it to foreclosure. The Court noted that this was the interpretation given the statute by the courts of Texas, which is the source of the Arizona law.

The Court found that that was not the situation in the Saxon case. It said, “there was absolutely no evidence to show that the real property involved needed to be sold to preserve any equities therein, or that it was in any danger of being materially injured, lost, removed, dissipated or wasted.”

Since no statute authorized the divorce court to order Wife to sell her interest in the property during the divorce case, the Court reversed the order compelling the sale of the property.  It should be noted the court may order the sale of the property when a final Decree of Dissolution of Marriage is issued by the court.

If you need information about selling a house during a divorce in Arizona, you should seriously consider contacting the attorneys at Hildebrand Law, PC. Our Arizona divorce attorneys have decades of combined experience successfully representing clients in divorce cases in Arizona.

Our family law firm has earned numerous awards such as US News and World Reports Best Arizona Family Law Firm, US News and World Report Best Divorce Attorneys, “Best of the Valley” by Arizona Foothills readers, and “Best Arizona Divorce Law Firms” by North Scottsdale Magazine.

Call us today at (480)305-8300 or reach out to us through our appointment scheduling form to schedule your personalized consultation and turn your Arizona divorce case around today.

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