When I got married, my mother married me a suite. When I came back from my honeymoon, my in-laws took my house. What should I do?

The family is an only child, and the mother is the apple of her parents' eye. My parents gave me a house to get married when I got married. It means that my husband's family can see that my family is rich and can't bully me.

But I didn't expect to meet the best mother-in-law She will take over my dowry room after marriage. He wouldn't let me in, saying that since his wife belongs to their family, now his brother-in-law is getting married and has no house. I will use my dowry room as my brother-in-law's wedding room.

At first, my mother-in-law asked me to make a down payment for my husband's wedding room. Now, in our wedding room, the two of us chip in to pay the mortgage. The pressure is still a little heavy, so my husband suggested that I might as well sell my companion's house, so that if the house is gone, my mother-in-law will have no idea With this money, we can also pay off the mortgage of our present house, and then when our brother-in-law gets married, we can buy a small house ourselves.

My home is in an excellent location in the urban area, and there is room for appreciation or preservation. I don't want to sell this house now. I will go home and discuss with my parents. Parents said that such a result would definitely not work.

First, the current marriage law protects premarital property. The house we gave you is pre-marital property. If you two don't have a good relationship, what's the problem? The house is still yours, but now it has been sold and can be used to pay off the husband's mortgage. Now the wedding room was bought by your husband's family before you two got married. Then there is his own personal property before marriage. It's none of your business.

In other words, if you do this, your house will be gone, and the money for selling the house will become the property after marriage. Moreover, the house you live in now is your husband's pre-marital property. Even if you get divorced later, that house has nothing to do with you. Although you paid the mortgage, the house has nothing to do with you. How could your husband do something that made you miserable?

Is your husband intentional or unintentional? Is he ignorant of the law or playing?

I'm really upset about this kind of thing and I don't know what to do. I even wonder if my husband works with his mother. But this idea makes me feel too stingy. Too concerned, don't trust her husband. He really doesn't like that kind of person.

But I have a knot in my heart, and I don't know how to face him in the future. Later, my mother suggested returning the house to my parents. The door lock was changed and rented to someone else. My mother-in-law directly asked my husband to divorce me this time, and my husband didn't listen to her. Be good to me as always.

However, I am really a better accountant in my heart, and I don't feel as close to my husband as before. Do you think my husband will really do this?