Shes Going to Honor Her Word. Im Just Taking It Out of Her Hide: Ramsey to Caller Losing $660K House After Mother in Law Backs Out

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Shes Going to Honor Her Word. Im Just Taking It Out of Her Hide: Ramsey to Caller Losing $660K House After Mother in Law Backs Out

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A caller on The Ramsey Show described a situation that started with the best of intentions and ended with a family in financial freefall: she and her husband built a $660,000 multi-generational home with his parents, each contributing around $100,000. After the father-in-law passed away, the mother-in-law moved in with a new boyfriend and stopped contributing her agreed-upon share of the $3,600 monthly mortgage. The problem: no written contract exists, only text messages.

Dave Ramsey’s response was direct: “She’s going to honor her word. I’m just taking it out of her hide.” Co-host George Kamel added his read on the dynamic: “She’s met somebody and he’s whispering in her ear ’cause he wants that money in his pocket, not in y’all’s.”

Every family considering shared real estate needs to understand what went wrong here before signing anything.

Why Text Messages Are Not a Contract

The core issue is informal co-ownership, a financially dangerous arrangement. When two households buy property together without a formal written agreement, deed structure, or legal entity, the financial exposure is asymmetric. One party can stop paying. The other party still owes the full mortgage.

In this case, the caller’s household is absorbing a $3,600 monthly mortgage that was structured around two families sharing the load. The caller’s household must now cover the mother-in-law’s share alone or risk foreclosure on a $660,000 home. Over time, that gap compounds into thousands in unplanned housing costs, not counting legal fees or the carrying cost of a home they may need to sell.

Text messages can establish intent, but they rarely constitute an enforceable contract for real estate obligations. Courts look for consideration, specificity, and signatures. “I’ll cover my share” in a text thread is a starting point for negotiation, not a binding instrument.

Ramsey’s Sell-Immediately Advice Is Correct

Ramsey advises selling immediately and deducting what the mother-in-law owed from her share of the proceeds. This is the right call for one reason: every month the family delays, they subsidize the mother-in-law’s equity position while absorbing the full cost of carrying the debt.

Assume the home was purchased with roughly $100,000 contributed by each family. If the property sells at or near its purchase price, the mother-in-law’s share of equity is reduced by whatever she failed to contribute toward the mortgage during her absence. Ramsey’s approach treats those missed payments as a debt against her proceeds, which is legally defensible if the text messages establish the original agreement.

Waiting is the losing strategy. Housing starts are running at roughly 1.49 million annualized units, reflecting a healthy but not exceptional housing market. The window to sell at a reasonable price exists now. Holding a property in a contested co-ownership arrangement while carrying an unshared mortgage burns cash every month.

The Families Most at Risk From Informal Co-Ownership

This call is a cautionary template for families considering multi-generational home purchases with parents, siblings, or adult children. The arrangement works when every party’s financial obligation is documented in a deed of trust, co-ownership agreement, or formal promissory note. It fails when goodwill substitutes for paperwork.

Consumer sentiment has been running near recessionary levels, hovering around 56.6 on the University of Michigan index, which means financial stress inside families is elevated. That stress creates exactly the conditions where informal agreements collapse. A parent who agreed to contribute in a moment of family solidarity may find that commitment harder to honor when circumstances change.

Ramsey acknowledged the emotional dimension directly: “Whatever money I lost, whatever tears I have shed over the stupidity of this deal was worth it for that precious 6 or 8 months and to be there when Pop passed.” The caller should not carry guilt about the original decision. The mistake was the absent paperwork, not the impulse behind it.

What to Do Before Any Shared Purchase

Before entering any co-ownership arrangement, every party should insist on three things: a written co-ownership agreement specifying each party’s monthly contribution, a deed structure that reflects actual ownership percentages, and a buyout or dissolution clause that spells out what happens when one party stops paying or wants to exit. An attorney can draft this for a modest fee, often under $1,000 depending on complexity (a realistic estimate, not a guaranteed figure). That cost is trivial against the carrying risk of a six-figure mortgage.

For the caller in this situation, the next step is an attorney who handles real estate disputes. The text messages may be enough to establish the agreement. The mother-in-law’s share of proceeds is the mechanism for recovering those missed payments.

Photo of Austin Smith, PhD, MD, CFA
About the Author Austin Smith, PhD, MD, CFA →

Austin Smith is a financial publisher with over two decades of experience as an investor, analyst, and advisor. He covers stocks, ETFs, Artificial intelligence and personal finance for 24/7 Wall St. Previously, he spent over a decade at The Motley Fool as a senior editor for Fool.com, portfolio advisor for Millionacres, and launched The Ascent to help reader take control of their personal finances.

His work has been featured on Fool.com, NPR, CNBC, USA Today, Yahoo Finance, MSN, AOL, Marketwatch, and many other publications. He is as an advisor to private companies, and co-hosts The AI Investor Podcast with Eric Bleeker. 

When not looking for investment opportunities, he can be found skiing, running, or playing soccer with his children. Learn more about Austin's investment approach here.

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