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I think you don't owe taxes, but read on. (I'm also mad at your attorney, if you had one.)
Here are two ways this would normally work.
1. the home is jointly owned. You transfer ownership in return for an immediate payment. The transfer payment is not taxable to you or deductible to him since payments made to equalize assets are not taxable or deductible. When and if he sells, any capital gains tax is solely his responsibility.
2. You retain your half-interest ownership until the home is sold, whenever that is. At that time, each of you is responsible for half the capital gains (if there are any) and you can each apply your $250,000 exclusion toward your part of the gain, unless you are disqualified from using the exclusion for some other reason.
You did something different, and in my mind, dangerous and stupid. It sounds like you transferred ownership for the promise of a future payment, and to guarantee the payment, you took a lien. This was a very bad idea and leaves you in a much weaker position than either scenario above. For one thing, you are still on the mortgage, meaning you are obligated to pay for a home that you do not own. If your spouse stops paying the mortgage, you lose everything unless you pay up on a home you don't own. Secondly, your lien is secondary to the bank's lien on the first mortgage (because no bank would agree to make themselves secondary to you). That means that, if he stops paying and the home is foreclosed, you get nothing on your secondary lien unless the bank is first made whole on their primary lien. For example, suppose the home is worth $200,000 and has a $100,000 mortgage. If it goes into foreclosure and the foreclosure sale results in a payment to the bank of $101,000, the payoff on your lien is $1000 and that's all you get.
Or, suppose your spouse takes out a second mortgage and then dies or runs away. He can take out the second mortgage without your permission because you are not an owner, but your lien would be almost worthless.
Giving up ownership while being obligated on the mortgage is a bad strategy and your attorney was not smart to agree to it, unless your attorney raised these objections and you decided to agree to it anyway.
This could also result in higher taxes for your ex since, as sole owner, he can only exclude $250,000 of gain from his taxes. If you were joint owners (example 2) you could each exclude $250,000 of gain on half the gain, effectively doubling the exclusion. If your home is likely to sell for more than a $250,000 gain (increase in value from the purchase) then this strategy means your ex pays more tax than option 2 above.
Now back to taxes;
Probably what will happen is that your spouse is sole owner, and is fully responsible for any capital gains taxes when and if he sells the home. Any payment to you out of his proceeds is non-taxable to you and non-deductible to him since it is a payment to equalize your assets after a divorce.
But, if he has a clever attorney and does not want to pay all the taxes, he could try and argue that you are an owner in fact even though you are not an owner in name.
You may want to seek expert assistance in that case.
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