My grandfather was diagnosed with dementia. My mother and my aunty were made his power of attorney with my mother the enduring guardian.
Another family member, living in my grandfather with dementia's home, utterly destroyed the home. It was soiled and damaged.
I was asked by my mother to go to the house and renovate it to a liveable condition and in return, I would be able to purchase it at market cost. She told me that the second power of attorney agreed.
No contracts were drawn but conversations were kept.
The house now renovated but not in a liveable condition, the second power of attorney has now denied agreeing to the purchase and instead stated we must become tenants. Though we have done a magnitude of work over a 14 month period and spent a lot of money to get it close to a liveable standard under the grounds of knowing we would own the property. The property would not be considered tenantable is its current state
Firstly, in what area does my legal issue fall and how best would I pursue remedies?
Would it be possible to claim a stake in the property's title or pursue contractual compensation?
Another family member, living in my grandfather with dementia's home, utterly destroyed the home. It was soiled and damaged.
I was asked by my mother to go to the house and renovate it to a liveable condition and in return, I would be able to purchase it at market cost. She told me that the second power of attorney agreed.
No contracts were drawn but conversations were kept.
The house now renovated but not in a liveable condition, the second power of attorney has now denied agreeing to the purchase and instead stated we must become tenants. Though we have done a magnitude of work over a 14 month period and spent a lot of money to get it close to a liveable standard under the grounds of knowing we would own the property. The property would not be considered tenantable is its current state
Firstly, in what area does my legal issue fall and how best would I pursue remedies?
Would it be possible to claim a stake in the property's title or pursue contractual compensation?