Kingman is the county seat of Mohave County and the commercial hub of northwestern Arizona along historic Route 66. Co-ownership disputes here often involve residential homes, commercial properties, and rural desert parcels. Partition actions are filed in Mohave County Superior Court in Kingman. We represent Kingman co-owners through all phases of partition proceedings.
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Under Arizona Revised Statutes § 12-1211, any co-owner of real property in Kingman or elsewhere in Mohave County has the absolute right to bring a partition action in Mohave County Superior Court — regardless of what the other co-owners want.
The court orders the Kingman property sold and proceeds distributed among co-owners proportionate to their ownership interests. The most common outcome in Mohave County partition cases.
If the property can be physically divided fairly, the court may award each co-owner a separate titled portion. Less common than partition by sale, and typically requires the property to be divisible.
Filing a partition action in Mohave County Superior Court often brings the other party to the table. We structure private buyouts as an alternative to a full court-ordered sale.
The court can adjust distributions to account for unequal mortgage payments, taxes, repairs, or carrying costs paid by one co-owner of the Kingman property over another.
Partition actions in Mohave County follow a predictable process. We guide Kingman co-owners through each stage.
We review your ownership structure for the Kingman property, identify all co-owners, and map the best path — litigation, negotiation, or buyout.
We file a partition complaint in Mohave County Superior Court and serve all co-owners, formally starting the partition proceeding for your Kingman property.
The court may appoint a Partition Commissioner to evaluate the Kingman property and determine whether sale or physical division is appropriate.
The court orders sale or division of the Kingman property. Proceeds are distributed after all expenses and contributions are accounted for.
Scott Resnick is an attorney licensed in both Arizona and California with 15 years of legal experience, including civil litigation and, for the past year and a half, a dedicated focus on Arizona residential partition actions. The vast majority of his partition work involves residential property — single-family homes, condos, vacation homes, and investment properties — held by co-owners who can no longer agree on what to do with them. He handles all phases of the process, from filing through Partition Commissioner proceedings and final distribution, in Mohave County Superior Court. Learn more about Scott →