The hearing was supposed to make me look like the problem. My sister’s side came prepared to describe me as the daughter who would not share, the sister clinging to a family property for selfish reasons. My parents sat behind her as if the decision had already been made.
Then the judge asked a question that cut through the emotion in the room: How many properties do you own?
My answer was simple: twelve.
That single response changed the direction of the case. The issue was no longer just one mountain property or a family disagreement. It became a closer look at ownership, financial contribution, and the story my family had chosen to tell.