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It is hard for siblings as money can often viewed as a sign of how much each child was 'loved' by the parent. In your brother's mind, he probably thinks he is entitled to 'half of the value of the house' as he was her child, and anything less than 'half' means your mother loved him less, or he may think it means your mother loved you more than him. Who knows what goes on sometimes in people's minds...
Money confuses and ruins family relationships, and it's awful what greed does to people.
As others have suggested, I would speak to an estate lawyer (take along all your documentation regarding your brother and the cheques you gave him). If your Mother's Will stated that the house goes to both of you equally, then it usually means market value of the house (but this depends on the wording of the Will and other factors also like if there was an agreement on the sale price, and if you have already paid him some money towards the house etc.). Ask the lawyer how much it costs to deal with this estate issue, and decide if it is worth doing, not just financially but emotionally. Your mental health and wellbeing is the most important thing. This was the reason I chose not to challenge my stepmother on my Father's Will (a horrible and horrific abuse situation) but I knew I would end up not coping emotionally if I had to challenge the Will in court and if I had to re-live what she did to him (and I would likely not survive it all emotionally). I had to let it all go for my own emotional wellbeing. Unfortunately, many of us are treated very badly in this life, and do not get to see justice in this life. It is heartbreaking and life is unfair and wrong in so many ways.
If it's going to cause you a lot of emotional stress to challenge the Will and/or estate of your Mother, I would think about probably agreeing to sell the house for market value, and give your selfish brother his half of the money. Then you start afresh, and move far away from him.
Whatever you decide to do, you sound like a very decent person and you have integrity and dignity, and you did the right thing by your Mother.
You could bill the estate for your caregiving for say, the last two months, but I doubt you'd get anything for time beyond that. You can't just go in and say you did it for two years and now the bill is due -- it doesn't work like that. Still, it's worth a shot.
Frankly, I'd sell the place. That's good, tax-free money right there. If you sell it relatively quickly you won't owe any capital gains taxes, because your cost basis from which they'd figure your tax is the value of the house the day your mom died, not what she paid for it. If the house has tripled in value, that's solid gold.
Still, consult a real estate attorney for YOUR side of this in order to protect your interests, plus a trust and estate attorney in regard to charging the estate for your services. My dad insisted I be paid for caring for him and my mother for two months straight, and his attorney insisted I pay myself the going rate for caregivers. (I was POA, too.) That was $25/hour, 24 hours a day, for 60 days. You do the math.
I was paid handsomely, but in the end, I handled my mother's affairs for an additional 2 1/2 years (although she was in an nursing home by then), and went through the wringer with her various crises during that time and didn't charge a dime to the estate, so I feel I did earn that original payout.
No matter how u handled this, get a lawyer. If a lawyer was involved in the initial agreement, brother does not have a leg to stand on.
Was this payment per a verbal agreement? Are you living in the house now?
Your mother should have compensated you for taking care of her for over 2 years. Did you think it was right that you would do it for free? I take it the will says that you inherit the house equally with your brother?
Sounds like your wonderful mother raised her son to be a skunk.