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lillibet2

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Posts posted by lillibet2

  1. I don't know that I'm afraid Ford. I would have to check. Thank you

     

    I have now checked both the general and special terms and there was nothing there to say that anything could be introduced between exchange and completion. We are just within the 6 years that you have to make a complaint, and think that we should write to our conveyancer, laying out the details and asking for them to respond. The question is that if they don't respond until the 6 years is up, will we lose the right to claim? Or does the six years start from the time that we became aware these covenants were introduced after we had exchanged contracts which is quite recently? Also, should we be consulting a specialist solicitor to make a claim against our conveyancer? thank you for all your help.

  2. thank you steam powered. I do realise how important it is. The special conditions of sale in respect of the sale by auction of (the property) which incorporates the general conditions of sale runs to five pages, and I'm not at all sure from looking at it which are special and which are general conditions. The first heading is 'special conditions of sale', and under this heading are the definitions and interpretations: the auctioneer, the buyer, the buyer's solicitor, the completion date the contract rate, the general conditions (means the common auction conditions as referred to in the property auction group's auction details - which I don't have at present), the particulars, the property, the purchase price, the seller, the seller's solicitors, working day, interpretation. The next heading is general and special conditions of sale and it says the property is sold subject to the general conditions and these special conditions. In the event of any conflict the special conditions shall prevail. next sub heading is memorandum which talks about the signature at the close of the sale and deposit being paid. The next heading is completion. this talks about the completion date being four weeks after the auction. the next heading is capacity and covenants of Title which says the seller sells as executor with limited title guarantee. This refers to the epitome of title which I do not have at the moment but am looking for it. There were no existing restrictive covenants on this prior to the auction. There are a few other headings. I don't really know how important they are and whether they refer to general or specific conditions. Sorry if this hasn't been helpful, and I"m very grateful for your help.

  3. Thank you steampowered for your reply. The terms as far as we can tell incorporate the standard conditions of sale. The covenants were introduced after exchange of contracts and we employed a conveyancer to undertake land registry searches prior to exchange. So the question is who is responsible? Are we responsible for not reading all the documents prior to completing. We certainly didn't expect anyone to introduce changes. Our conveyancer didn't notice anything, but we are assured that the covenants were registered at the land registry after the contracts were exchanged but prior to completion. What can we do?

  4. One of them was not to object to any planning application made by the owners/trustees of the retained land after our house was partitioned off. This is what they are now threatening action over. Another way leave was that drainage from any development built on the retained land would go under our garden. They have now put in a planning application which would require our whole garden being dug up. We would never have agreed to these covenants had we known about them. We thought we had bought a house and at exchange nothing would change before completion without our knowledge. Who is right? thank you

  5. Thank you, I will try. My partner and I bought a house at auction. We were new to this and probably naive. We used a conveyancer we had used before but she wasn't experienced with auctions. After the auction having read all the associated documents, paid the deposit and exchanged contracts, we proceeded to completion 4 weeks later. Unbeknown to us and not picked up by our conveyancer, the vendor who was the executor of an estate of a deceased person and a solicitor had introduced 3 restrictive covenants which now are causing real problems and we are being threatened with legal action because we have not complied with one of the covenants of which we were not aware. Does this make sense? So the question was, can restrictive covenants like this be introduced after contracts have been exchanged and without informing the buyer, just slipped in with the paperwork and hoping to get away with it?

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