One for the legal eagles - forcing the sale of a jointly owned house

Here is a bunch of money that I owe and you are struggling to get from me in exchange for you accepting it as a full and final settlement. Which is binding, because I have acted against my interest on a promise from you to not take it further.

And yet again, you totally misunderstand the law.
 
Looks like MNW found some old text books

Why old text books in particular. I do still have some of my old law text books from University decades ago, but I haven't used them today. That is why I have been using the internet to get the most recent information.
 

I doubt you had even heard of estoppel before. Give me a brief summary of what you think it means.

It's a bit like your nonsense about "co-ownership trusts" yesterday. I spoon feed you information, and then you pretend you knew it all along.
 
I doubt you had even heard of estoppel before. Give me a brief summary of what you think it means.

It's a bit like your nonsense about "co-ownership trusts" yesterday. I spoon feed you information, and then you pretend you knew it all along.
of course you did.
 
of course you did.

Most jointly owned property isn't held on "co-ownership trusts" like you stated. I just let that slide. It was clearly something you Googled because you had no idea that jointly held property is automatically held on trust.
 
Most jointly owned property isn't held on "co-ownership trusts" like you stated. I just let that slide. It was clearly something you Googled because you had no idea that jointly held property is automatically held on trust.
yet I managed to quote the correct law and the relevant section, all by myself.
 
Nothing in there is fresh consideration. That is the whole point.
No the whole point is you incorrectly thinking that the bank could come after SS having accepted the offer in full.
 
No the whole point is you incorrectly thinking that the bank could come after SS having accepted the offer in full.

Show me the fresh consideration in that letter, required by law, to make it binding.
 
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