Quizzes & Puzzles24 mins ago
Property Indemnity Insurance
We had an offer accepted a month ago on a extended house. Upon receiving the contract and title deeds from the vendors solicitor, our solicitor has found that the land the extension was built on does not belong to the seller but too two companies that no longer exist.
The extension is 14 years old.
It has been suggested that the sellers provide us with indemnity insurance. We are worried about how this leaves us in the future - will we have trouble selling? We also feel our original offer on the property is now overpriced as the land will not belong to us! Please help!
The extension is 14 years old.
It has been suggested that the sellers provide us with indemnity insurance. We are worried about how this leaves us in the future - will we have trouble selling? We also feel our original offer on the property is now overpriced as the land will not belong to us! Please help!
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by STARSKY7. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Under the Law of Adverse Possession, a person may apply to have land that he/she has occupied for at least 12 years continuously, registered as his own. This is more commonly known in the popular press as Squatters Rights. Since your vendor has been in possession of this land for greater than the required period, this is what he would be able to do. The vendor could alternatively supply a purchaser with a Statutory Declaration to the effect that he had been occupying it for greater than 12 years, such that you could register claim to the title with the Land Registry. Then the land on which the extension sits becomes legally yours. The idea of indemnity insurance is a further belt-and-braces measure to ensure that if a challenge to the claim emerges from the woodwork, you would be compensated.
This is presumably what your solicitor is telling you and it always intrigues me about these questions that folks appear to mistrust their professional advisor to the extent that they want a second opinion from an anonymous (but hopefully accurate) website. I trust my view aligns to that of your solicitor.
You may wish to renegotiate your offer on the basis of the aggro of having to go through this process. Your solicitor may anticipate slightly higher fees - there's more work for him - ask him. But you will end up owning the land.
This is presumably what your solicitor is telling you and it always intrigues me about these questions that folks appear to mistrust their professional advisor to the extent that they want a second opinion from an anonymous (but hopefully accurate) website. I trust my view aligns to that of your solicitor.
You may wish to renegotiate your offer on the basis of the aggro of having to go through this process. Your solicitor may anticipate slightly higher fees - there's more work for him - ask him. But you will end up owning the land.