In the story broadcast last night,
Mr. Gong's family business funds were cut off,
I want to entrust Aunt Xu and Fang to sell the old ancestral villa.
Unexpectedly,
This property with clear property rights has encountered twists and turns-
Decades ago, the head of the household took in his distant cousin wholeheartedly, and let the woman who lived alone with her two sons build a small bungalow in the garden.
After living for decades, the old lady moved away with her two sons, but when she learned that the descendants of the Gong family were going to sell the house, she killed a comeback and wanted a piece of the action.
Mr. Gong misses the old feelings of living under the same roof in the past. When he wanted to send him away with 3 million yuan, his family not only didn't appreciate the kindness of the elders of the Gong family, but wanted to occupy the nest. The opening was 50 million yuan.
Such an ungrateful and insatiable person makes the audience in front of the TV itch: "This plot is too outrageous. Will there be such a shameless person in reality? "
When Grandpa Gong's family appeared and raised the price to 6.5438+million, many people were even more surprised: their house cost 6.5438+million to send away a group of "strangers".
But in fact, life is far more than the dog blood of TV series-some netizens soon discovered that this case is based on real events.
The witness of the incident, Mr. Hauser, shared his personal experience in Zhihu earlier. Yesterday morning, he once again restored the ins and outs of things in detail on the Weibo:
Some netizens don't understand: why should they be given money to sell their own houses?
Mr. Hauser replied, "Well, you are still kind. You know, because the confiscation of rent is their excuse. Too chilling. "
In fact, in Shanghai, there are more stories behind the old houses than we thought.
Lawyer Li Dahong, a partner of Zhonglun Wende Law Firm Shanghai Branch, told the reporter that in practice, the dispute of "nine birds occupy the nest" described in "An Jia" does happen from time to time, especially in the old villa in Shanghai, and there are more real cases. "We have represented several cases, and some old landlords left Shanghai for historical and personal reasons, leaving their houses to relatives and neighbors to look after. After the death of the old landlord, future generations return to Shanghai to hope to inherit, and often have disputes with the people entrusted to look at the house, even their descendants, on the ownership of the house. "
Lawyer Li Dahong said that there are also legal difficulties in such incidents. "First, the determination of the ownership of the house, the owner of the TV series still has a real estate license, but many times the landlord does not have a real estate license, and some old houses have been demolished or affected by policies in the past few decades, and the ownership has changed several times; Second, there are many stakeholders. The original landlords of old houses are often older, and some have even passed away. Therefore, it is necessary to work hard to determine the heirs with inheritance rights. "
Cases mentioned by lawyer Li are not uncommon.
20171kloc-0/,the opening of the Shanghai Symphony Museum, located at No.3 Baoqing Road, the former residence of Zhou Zongliang, the dyeing king of Shanghai, once again brought out an embarrassing past. The dispute caused by this house is exactly what lawyer Li Dahong calls a property right dispute.
In this story, the protagonist also lived in the old villa for decades, and because he had no property rights, he had to leave when the house was sold. But unlike the play, he is the biological son of the legal heir of the old villa.
No.3 Baoqing Road, one of the largest private gardens in the center of Shanghai, was built in the 1920s, covering an area of 4,750 square meters, including a building area of 1.208 square meters. Huge gardens are rare in the center of Shanghai.
Around 0/930 of last century, Zhou Zongliang, the "king of dyes", bought it from a German businessman and expanded it on the basis of the original building, forming a separate form of living room, master room, sitting room, servant building and kitchen building.
1948, moved to hong kong, and her four daughters moved in with her husband Xu xingye, two children and one daughter on 1953. That year, the youngest son, Xu Yuanzhang, was only 7 years old.
1957, died in Hong Kong. Zhou He went to Hong Kong to attend his funeral and accept his legacy, and never returned here.
Regrettably, when Zhou Zongliang's sons and daughters are about to die one after another, the division of Zhou Zongliang's heritage has increasingly become a heart disease for many younger generations-Zhou Zongliang married four families, including Sun Jiayi, and had six sons and seven daughters, leaving many grandchildren scattered in China and the United States.
Because Xu Yuanzhang's mother, Zhou, lost contact with her family and was considered as "missing", Xu Yuanzhang could not obtain the inheritance right of No.3 Road.
In 2002, Zhou Zongliang's family demanded the division of his estate. After living for most of his life, his family asked him to move out. After many twists and turns, Xu Yuanzhang still couldn't get the inheritance right of this house, so he had to move out sadly.
In 2006, Shanghai Real Estate Group bought this villa by auction, and carried out renovation work on 20 13. 201710/day, it opened a new chapter-after careful renovation, this European-style mansion that witnessed the rise and fall of a prosperous family has a new name: Shanghai Jiao.
It is understood that ordinary citizens can read the legendary story behind this old villa as long as they make an appointment to visit in advance.