QLD Verbal Agreement

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Gary

Well-Known Member
2 November 2014
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My 83 year old mother recently lost her husband. She is currently being assessed re her ability to move back into her home.
The home belongs to my half brother and he purchased the home after his dad, my step dad, went bankrupt. The rationale was rather than waste money on rent and motels etc my half brother could get first home owners and with by pooling whatever resiurces they had they could get a house. The deal was he gets house in his name his father and mother have somewhere to live till they die and the step dad does maintenance round the property.
Things pear shaped over the years and now his dad is dead he wants to do the property up rent it and then sell it without honoring his agreement. Whst rights if any dies the 83 year old have?
 

Atticus

Well-Known Member
6 February 2019
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Here’s the plain-English, Queensland-specific explanation of what rights your mother may have, and what direction you should take next.


1. Does your mother have automatic rights?

No automatic legal right exists just because she lived there or because there was an informal family understanding.
BUT she may still have rights under equitable law, which can be powerful.


2. The big issue: Was there a clear agreement?

From what you’ve described:

  • The house was bought in your half-brother’s name
  • The agreement was:
    Your mother + her husband could live there for life,
    He would get ownership,
    He’d get the First Home Owners benefits,
    They’d contribute whatever resources they had,
    Step-dad would provide labour/maintenance.
If this agreement can be shown to a court, even informally, your mother may have rights under:

Constructive Trust

A court can say:

Even though he holds legal title, he is holding it subject to obligations because the parents relied on the agreement.

Proprietary Estoppel

If she can show she relied on the promise (life-long accommodation) and would suffer detriment if it’s broken, a court can enforce that promise.

Life tenancy / equitable right to occupy

Even without a formal life tenancy contract, courts can recognise an equitable life interest in the home.

These arguments do succeed in Australia — courts don’t like children using formal ownership to defeat long-standing family promises.


3. Key factors that help her case

Your mother’s rights are stronger if any of the following exist:

  • Financial contribution to purchase, renovations, bills, or mortgage
  • Labour contributions by step-dad (maintenance, improvements)
  • Emails or messages referring to the “agreement”
  • Statements to others (neighbours, relatives) about the arrangement
  • Duration of residence (long-term, stable occupation)
  • Her advanced age and vulnerability (courts weigh this heavily)

4. If there is zero written agreement?

She still may have rights.
Australian courts recognise that family property arrangements are often informal, especially involving elderly parents.

The absence of a written contract does not kill her claim.


⚠️ 5. What your brother legally can’t do right now

If your mother has an arguable equitable interest, he cannot simply evict her, renovate, rent, or sell the property freely.

Her lawyer can place a caveat over the title to stop any sale until her rights are determined.

This is often the first and most essential step.


6. Practical next steps (very important)

A. Urgently see a Queensland property/elder law solicitor

She may be eligible for free or heavily discounted advice through:

  • Caxton Legal Centre (Qld) – Elder Law
  • Qld Seniors Legal and Support Service
  • Community Legal Centres Qld

B. Lawyer can lodge a caveat

This stops your brother from selling or transferring the property.

C. Lawyer can prepare a claim for:​

  • constructive trust
  • proprietary estoppel
  • equitable life interest
  • or compensation if she is forced to move
Even the threat of these claims often pushes the other party into negotiation.


🧭 7. Realistically: What outcomes are possible?

Most common real-world outcomes:

  1. She is allowed to live in the house for life
    (either formally or by agreement to avoid litigation)
  2. She receives a payout / settlement
    if he wants to sell, he may need to buy out her equitable interest.
  3. Court orders a life interest / equitable accommodation right
    (rarely needed, but courts can enforce it)
  4. Worst case: she must move, but she receives compensation for the broken promise.

BOTTOM LINE

Your mother may have enforceable rights, even without a written contract, because:

  • there was a clear family agreement,
  • she relied on it for years,
  • she is elderly and vulnerable,
  • and your half-brother benefited financially (FHOG etc.) from the arrangement.
This is the exact type of scenario where Queensland courts recognise constructive trusts and proprietary estoppel to protect elderly parents.

Don’t let him sell the property before getting legal advice.
A caveat can stop everything.
 

Gary

Well-Known Member
2 November 2014
49
0
121
Hello, thank you so much for your very informative and detailed reply.
There have been a few things that have come to light that may, or may not have some impact on how best my mother and I should proceed.
I should say that my mum might be 83 and is physically not able to do what she could 20 years ago but after speaking to her she is coherrent, comprehends is able to listen and formulate appropriate responses. My ex partner has also been able to speak with the person respnsible for my mums welfare plan and she had stated that whilst she will need assistance she sees no reason why she shouldnt be able to return home.
After speaking with my mum i found out that within 3 business days of his stepdad dying, my half brother had retained a lawyer, had some paperwork drawn up and then he and his Lawyer presented at the hospital telling my mum it was a POA,it was only required so he could quickly deal with her and his stepdads affairs that this would speed up the process so he could get the house up to a liverable standard and get her out of there quicker. She said only my HB, the Lawyer and herself were present and whilst she signed the back of both documents she didnt recall my HB or Lawyer signing. She said she wasnt sure if there were 2 seperate POA documents. She did not receive a copy but the Lawyer left his business card.I asked her if she had given HB any money. She said she had given him her cards (no pin#) and all the cash she had on her. when pressed she finally admitted she had given HB over $4G. I asked why she had over 4g on her? why didnt she put it in a bank? she said it was cash she had saved and hidden from my step-dad becasue he had been finding out she hadmoney in her account (opening her bank statements) so she would hide it somewhere . I asked why she gave it ALL to my HB she said he had been making her feel bad about the house and she was concerned he would throw her out so she told him she could contibute and handed over all she had on her. 8th December he told her that an elctrician he had hired to install 3 ceiling fans (wiring already there) was going to cost over that this was over $2000. I asked her if she had any cash in her savings account and she said she had over 27g in there but not to worry as my HB did not have the pin numbers to her cards. I told her he doesnt need pin. Told her she needs to contact bank asap and put block on her account

My HB has also told her that there is a lot of work to be done. The house had not been maintained and that there were a lot of repairs required. He told my mum he and my mum will sit down at some point and work out what she owes him.(until my step dads death i hadnt spoken to all three of them since 2013-i had a stroke 3 years ago which restricts my left arm and leg which is why i dont figure much, however in text correspondence he has told me that he has so far spent $10g and it wil cost a further 30-50g but he has never mentioned my mum POA, recieving over 4g in cash from my mum as well as the $3200 from the UK, he always insinuates that it is he who is funding this project..I asked her if she had given him any money. She said she had given him her savings and credit cards (no money owing on CC) and some cash she had in her bag. I asked her how much and sshe said over $4G. I asked why she had over 4g on her? why didnt she put it in a bank? she said it was cash she had saved and hidden from my step-dad becasue he had been finding out she had savings through her mail and bullying her into drawing sums out so she got small amounts out to hide somewhere in her bedroom. I asked why she gave it all to him and she said she felt guilty when he was telling her what he had to do to fix it up and so she gave it to him. Today he told her that an elctrician he hired to install 3 ceiling fans (wiring already there) and that this was over $2000. I asked her if she had any cash in her savings account and she said she had over 27g in there but not to worry as my HB did not have the pin numbers to her cards. I told her he doesnt need pin numbers to access the account he will just go to her bank and put the POA on file. he could not use any of her funds to carry out work that benefitted him as I believed it was considered a conflict of interest.
My ex has been helping my HB and they have found evidence that Stepdad was in serious decline. This prompted HB to state in a text to me that he didnt know how stepdad was able to function as he wa %@*#d. In what way i replied. "lost his mind.There was no way he was looking after her, he couldnt even look after himself" Turns out she had beeen knocked got sicker with ross river fever but he had slowly been dropping the ball due to his mental illness. I found out from this conversation that my mum was considered next of kin regarding my stepdad not my HB but with the POA he now controlled both estates(is that true). I also learnt today that my step-dads sister in UK died about 16 months ago. In her will she left £800 ($1600aud) for my step dad and the same amount to my mum. My mum said that the estate only settled middle of this year (april/may) but because neither my mum or sted-dad could get out they couldnt do whatever was required for my HB's cousin to transfer the money. My Mum said that my HB had been able to receive this money $3200aud so im guessing also under the POA? I know for a fact that he has been spending a lot of time at the house my mum lives in and that he has had skips in, pulled up carpets thrown out property belonging to my mum, (20 year old white leather three piece suite bought for $7000) clothes, shoes, linen. He has also been collecting items my mum bought but never used, brand new still in the box elctrical goods, kitchen appliances etc to sell on either ebay or gumtree and that he has been doing the same with the contents of my stepdads shed which was full of tools and devices, he was a bricklayer/builder until the age of 76. Can he legally do all that under the POA?
My list of things so far is blocking access to finances and arranging legal represntation so a caveat can be put in place. Hopefully you can help further or suggest places that can. Thank you and kind regards
 

Atticus

Well-Known Member
6 February 2019
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Here is a clear, structured, Queensland-accurate breakdown of what is happening here, what is legal, what is absolutely not legal, and what you need to do immediately to protect your mother.

You are dealing with:

  • a possible misuse of an Enduring Power of Attorney (EPOA),
  • elder financial abuse,
  • unlawful disposal of property,
  • the risk of loss of your mother’s home and assets, and
  • a family-agreement property dispute with strong potential grounds.
You’re right to act fast — and you can absolutely stop this if you move now.


🚨 1. The POA situation is highly suspicious

The circumstances you describe raise multiple red flags for invalidity under QLD’s Powers of Attorney Act.

The POA may be invalid if:​

  • Your mother signed under pressure, deception, intimidation, or misrepresentation.
  • She was told it was “just paperwork to speed things up”, not what it actually was.
  • She signed without independent legal advice.
  • No one explained the effect of the document to her.
  • The lawyer and your brother were the only witnesses (this is a breach — the witness must not benefit under the POA).
  • She does not recall receiving a copy.
  • She does not recall proper witnessing or certification.
If your brother or his lawyer stood to benefit, the POA is automatically invalid.
If the POA is invalid, everything he has done under it is unlawful.


🚨 2. Your brother using her POA to access money is likely ILLEGAL

Under Queensland law, an attorney under POA must:

  • act for the principal’s benefit only
  • avoid conflict transactions
  • not profit personally
Your brother:

  • took her cash
  • accessed her inherited funds
  • is preparing to access her bank accounts
  • is selling her belongings
  • is spending her money on his renovation plans
  • is implying she “owes him” repair costs (she doesn’t)
All of these are prohibited unless:

  • she specifically authorised them in writing,
  • they directly benefit her,
  • and there is no conflict of interest.
Renovating his investment property using her funds is a conflict transaction and is unlawful.

He can be:

  • removed as attorney
  • required to repay every cent
  • reported for elder abuse
  • referred to QCAT or police

🚨 3. He has no right to throw out her belongings

Under Queensland law, an attorney must:

  • protect the principal’s property
  • preserve assets
  • not dispose of property unless doing so benefits the principal
Throwing out furniture, clothing, and possessions is not allowed.
Selling new items, appliances, and tools for his own gain is theft if he used a POA to justify it.

This is actually one of the most common forms of elder financial abuse, and Queensland law takes it very seriously.


🚨 4. He has no right to take over your step-dad’s estate

A POA ceases automatically when the person dies.

This means:

  • your brother cannot use a POA to control your stepdad’s estate
  • any attempt to do so is legally invalid
  • he cannot collect inheritance money using POA
  • he cannot manage property, bank accounts, or belongings of the deceased
He may have obtained the UK inheritance illegally.


🚨 5. Your mother still has legal occupancy rights

Even if he owns the house outright, he cannot:

  • evict her
  • declare she “owes” him for repairs
  • restrict access
  • remove her belongings
  • use POA powers to manipulate where she lives
She is still the lawful occupant until a court says otherwise.

Her equitable claims (life interest, estoppel, constructive trust) are still valid.
 

Atticus

Well-Known Member
6 February 2019
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🚨 6. You must do these steps IMMEDIATELY

STEP 1 — Get her bank accounts frozen to his access

You already identified this.
Do it NOW.
Have your mother:

  • call her bank
  • revoke all POA authority
  • place a “suspected elder financial abuse” flag on her profile
  • request new cards and changed account numbers
Banks in Australia act very quickly when POA misuse is involved.


STEP 2 — Get the POA suspended or revoked

You can do this via:

Queensland Civil and Administrative Tribunal (QCAT)

You can apply for an urgent interim order suspending his POA immediately.

QCAT routinely suspends POAs when:

  • the attorney is acting in self-interest
  • assets are being mismanaged
  • the principal is vulnerable
  • financial abuse is suspected
This can be done without a lawyer.


STEP 3 — Lodge police or elder abuse hotline report

What you described meets the definition of elder financial abuse:

  • psychological pressure
  • misuse of POA
  • theft of money
  • disposing of her property
  • coercing her to sign documents
  • accessing inheritance funds without authority
You can contact:

Elder Abuse Prevention Unit (Qld)
1800 818 338

or the Queensland Police Financial and Cyber Crime Group.


STEP 4 — Contact Seniors Legal and Support Service

These services specialise in EXACT cases like this — POA abuse combined with property disputes.

In Qld, these include:

  • Caxton Legal Centre – Seniors Legal and Support Service (SLASS)
  • UnitingCare Elder Abuse Prevention
  • ADA Law (Aged & Disability Advocacy Australia)
They will:

  • review the POA
  • assist with QCAT
  • help secure her rights to return home
  • intervene in elder abuse
  • assist in placing a caveat on the property if needed
This is FREE.


STEP 5 — Engage a private solicitor (property + elder law)

Needed for:

  • equitable interest claim
  • caveat on the title
  • injunction if he tries to sell the home
  • recovery of funds he took
  • action for unlawful disposal of property

🚨 7. About the house itself

His goal is very clear:

  1. Remove your mother
  2. Renovate
  3. Rent or sell
  4. Keep all proceeds
Your mother has a very real chance of:

  • obtaining a life tenancy, OR
  • securing a financial interest in the property under estoppel/constructive trust, OR
  • blocking any sale until her rights are determined
But only if legal steps happen now, before he sells or transfers anything.


📌 Summary of what is clearly unlawful or improper

Your brother likely:

✔ Misrepresented the POA
✔ Is breaching attorney duties
✔ Is involved in conflict transactions
✔ Took money for his own benefit
✔ Is selling property he does not own
✔ Is accessing deceased estate money unlawfully
✔ Is manipulating an elderly person
✔ Is planning to evict her for profit
✔ Has failed to act in her best interests (required by law)

This is classic elder financial abuse combined with property fraud risk.
 

Gary

Well-Known Member
2 November 2014
49
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121
Hi Atticus. Sorry for my late reply, i have been sick most of the week but did advise my Mum and also printed off what you believed were areas she must address immediately as well as compiling it all into a word document which i also printed for her to read through. I am aware, and made my Mum aware, that this advice is exactly that and it is up to myself and my Mum to investigate further and to retain the services of someone in the legal profession with experience in this aspect of law.
Thank you so much for all of your help and your detailed response. I would imagine that it is not acceptable to offer you personally anything as a show of gratitude but if you would like me to make a donation somewhere like this site or your favourite charity I am more than happy to do so. Thank you again. Merry Christmas and a safe prosperous New Year to you and your family. kind regards Gary
 

Atticus

Well-Known Member
6 February 2019
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Hi Garry ....

Glad the information has been helpful. Just as an FYI ... if you or your mum require assistance to write letters to banks or other institutions, ChatGPT is extremely useful, not only in formatting and writing correspondence, but as a guide through the legal system, what laws apply, how they apply etc. You can sign up for a free account, write in as much relevant information about your circumstances as possible and go from there ..

Good luck and hopefully some or all of what is happening can be stopped. Merry Christmas