55°F
weather icon Clear

Readers speak out on rent question

This column published a letter from someone asking how rent should be apportioned when three adults and one child would be sharing a house — three bedrooms and two baths. The reader said the child would have one bedroom, and would share a bathroom but not with the mother.

I gave up trying to visualize the situation and threw the matter open to readers. Here's the very first response:

Q: First of all, clearly the mother is in the double room, or else she would have the single room that shares the bathroom with her child. So we have a couple, a single adult and a child in the three rooms. I think the rent and utilities should be split between the three adults. The mother can even things off by paying half of the grocery bill, since they are half of the people eating. It can be worked out fairly by looking at more than just the rent. — C. W., Rochester

A: Yes, but that child might not eat as much as an adult would. I've been picturing a little girl. If, on the other hand, it's a boy in his teens, he'll probably account for most of the food bill.

This one is keeping me up nights. We definitely have insufficient information.

No Offers Yet

Q: We are moving to be near our son and have found a lovely perfect house, which we put an offer on. Our house is very nice with a few drawbacks (busy street, 7,000 gallon Koi pond that takes up most of the backyard and low ceilings upstairs) and it has been on the market for months. Not one offer even though everyone loves it.

I'm a wreck and want this done. One real estate person mentioned getting a bridge loan on our fully paid house. The house we are buying is a lower price than ours. Is this a good idea? I'm a stressed out 75-year-old woman and I really need some good advice.

I tried burying St. Joseph that was mentioned by someone but it hasn't worked! If you would like to see what our house is like, here is the Web address ... — M. R., askedith.com

A: There's no use my seeing what your house looks like, or hearing about its good and bad points. Just one thing matters: You're asking too much. If you're using a real estate broker, and if your home is multiple-listed, then lots of buyers know about the house. They've had time to compare it with other properties on the market. Everyone may love it, but they don't love it enough to pay what you're asking.

There's nothing wrong with using a temporary bridge loan to buy the next house, but that won't solve the problem. Is that really your broker's only suggestion? Sooner or later, you'll have to drop your price to a level that attracts offers.

For your own peace of mind, to start enjoying your new home, and to save money in the long run, you might as well do it today.

Life Tenant's Responsibilities

Q: My 86-year-old stepfather has a life estate and I am on the deed as he quick-claimed the house to me in 2010. He is letting the house go to waste, due to lack of money and Alzheimer's. How do I get his life estate removed? —www.askedith.com

A: It's hard to advise you in what is evidently an unhappy situation. But at any rate: a life tenant is legally required to keep the taxes paid and the property in repair. I suppose you could contact a lawyer.

Newspaper Publishes Sales

Q: I have a friend who is very near to closing on a house in her hometown. Her local paper always publishes home sales, including buyer and seller names. Friend, who lives alone, does not want this transaction published because she has some serious security concerns about a couple of people who have given her major long-term grief, so she does not want them to know her new address.

Can she request at closing for this not to be published in any media format due to security and personal safety concerns? I understand that if someone really wants to know something they can always trot down to the courthouse and look it up, but that would require the knowledge that she is moving. Please advise and leave my name and initials out of this. — X.

A: It's for you friend's protection that the new deed will be entered in her county's public records. Once it's there, as you realize, everyone can view it, and the media have free access.

If anyone could block publication, then it'd be someone at that newspaper. I doubt if you friend will have much success contacting someone there. It'd be interesting to hear what answer she gets.

Edith Lank will respond personally to any question sent to www.askedith.com, to edithlank@aol.com, or to 240 Hemingway Drive, Rochester NY 14620.

THE LATEST
Historic Shakespeare Ranch lists for 188M

The historic Shakespeare Ranch, on the east shore of Lake Tahoe, is listed for $188 million through Chase International. Buyers can purchase the entire ranch or take an a la carte approach and acquire their choice of lakefront residences and homesites starting at $9.95 million.

Here is what the law says about service animals

Your board can contact the local Department of Housing and Urban Development office to discuss the specifics of your association, such as these dogs who may possess a possible threat to another individual.

Riviera Vista debuts in Lake Las Vegas

Last weekend, Lennar celebrated the grand opening of Riviera Vista at Lake Las Vegas in Henderson. Riviera Vista is a new neighborhood offering two-story homes in the heart of the popular master-planned community.

Trilogy Sunstone begins new phase

Las Vegas-area homebuyers are invited to the grand opening of a brand-new phase of homesites at Trilogy Sunstone, an age-qualified community, within the Sunstone master plan in the northwest valley.

Grand Park Village in Summerlin gets first neighborhood

Grand Park Village, the newest village to take shape in the master-planned community of Summerlin, is now home to its first neighborhood — Alton by KB Home, which features two distinctive collections of homes — the Landings and Reserves. This growing area of Summerlin sits on elevated topography that offers numerous vistas and vantage points throughout and is framed on its western edge by a dramatic mountain ridgeline that creates a unique, nature-connected setting.

$15M MacDonald Highlands sale leads October

A $15 million sale in MacDonald Highlands topped the list for the most expensive luxury home closing in October — a month that saw an IndyCar driver set up shop in Las Vegas and former Vegas Golden Knight Jonathan Marchessault sell his Summerlin property.

Taylor Morrison’s Kent Lay gives his take on the new home market

Taylor Morrison Division President Kent Lay said concerns over the election and rising mortgage rates slowed sales in the second half of the year but expects the market to pick back up again in 2025.

Pahrump community has questions about new development

Under Nevada Revised Statutes 116.3108 (2), an association shall hold a special meeting of the unit owners to address any matter affecting the community if at least 10 percent or any lower percentage specified in the bylaws of the total number of votes in the association request that the secretary call such a meeting.

Downtown Summerlin celebrates season of giving

The holidays at Downtown Summerlin, the vibrant urban core of the Summerlin master-planned community, represent the season of giving with three charitable activations that encourage visitors and patrons to pay it forward.

Two Las Vegas high-rise projects surpass more than $600M in sales

Las Vegas’s first two high-rise projects since before the Great Recession have surpassed more than $600 million in sales combined as construction commences at the end of the year.