Kylee Jacobsen
Lawyer | Director
Kylee provides practical advice in a straight-forward way to her clients. Kylee's main areas of practice include, residential and commercial conveyancing, advising on commercial contracts including building contracts, commercial leases and terms of trade, advising on business structures, business sales and purchases, relationship property arrangements, trusts, Wills and estate planning and administration.
Kylee's qualifications and memberships include:
- LLB, University of Waikato 2004
- BMS, University of Waikato 2004
- Admitted as a Barrister & Solicitor of the High Court 2005
- LLM, University of Auckland 2012
- Member of the New Zealand Law Society Property Law Section.
About Jacobsen & Co Lawyers
Founded in 2005
10 people in their team
Practice areas
Languages spoken
Practice areas
Real Estate
Property Law
Thinking of buying or selling a property? Need to refinance?
Whether you are buying or selling a property, you are the one who must be satisfied with the outcome - not the agent, not your family or friends. Stay in control of the process and let your lawyer help you to:
- understand the buying and selling process
- understand the continuing financial commitments, especially if you are buying a unit title or leasehold property as they are different to those associated with traditional home ownership
- understand the different disclosures you are legally required to make as a seller or request or receive as a buyer of a unit title property, and the consequences or remedies available if they are not made or are made late
- understand the loan documentation and the financial commitment you are making, and that it fits within your budget
- work out your financial limitations - how much you can borrow, how much you can afford to repay, and can you satisfy any conditions of your loan approval?
- talk to your lawyer about any pre-purchase checks (‘due diligence’) you should make
- find out the other costs of buying or selling a property
- complete any other legal work you might need such as making a will, preparing enduring powers of attorney, setting up a trust or understanding taxation or property relationship matters
- understand the agents’ role, who they work for, how they are paid and how you can get best value from them.
Family
Relationship Law
Sometimes things don’t work out how you have planned
Breaking up is hard to do, but so is coming together. We get it, talking about breaking up and who gets what is difficult when you are in a relationship and even more difficult when you have just left me. We have helped many different situations and because of our experience, we prioritise the human element over the process. You and your ideal outcome drives the process and not the other way around. When you enter a relationship and you and your partner don't start on an even footing financially, a contracting out agreement can help you. The agreement records who brought what to the relationship and what happens to your property if you separate or one of you dies.
It is called a contracting out agreement because once signed, you and your partner will have opted out of the equal sharing rules set out in our relevant legislation. Instead, you will make your own contractual arrangements with your partner.
At the other end of the relationship spectrum, when you exit a relationship, a separation agreement records your legal separation from your partner and sets out how your relationship assets and liabilities will be divided between you. This can be an emotional time and we are here to help.