Originally posted by SueEllen
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Reply to: Lost my buyer :-(
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Previously on "Lost my buyer :-("
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Originally posted by ZARDOZ View PostI thought it was illegal to do that?
http://www.wte-ltd.co.uk/emptying_tanks.html
http://m.fraserburghherald.co.uk/new...wage-1-2535406
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Originally posted by Gumbo Robot View PostIt's a local farmer.
Perhaps I can take a pic of him spreading it all over the fields as evidence.
http://www.wte-ltd.co.uk/emptying_tanks.html
http://m.fraserburghherald.co.uk/new...wage-1-2535406Last edited by ZARDOZ; 3 March 2016, 23:57.
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Originally posted by Gumbo Robot View PostYes - he tells me it was impossible to get anything from her
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Originally posted by jamesbrown View PostNah, there's a carve-out in the consultation for that scenario, although you may have to make a payment upfront and reclaim it later (assuming you can sell within a year IIRC). The whole thing is stupid, but it isn't aimed at people in your position.
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Originally posted by Gumbo Robot View PostEdit: scratch that - SDLT will apply to the new purchase
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Originally posted by Mincepie View Postin 4 months your house has gone up in value by a significant % so put it back on the market at a higher price and answer the next solicitors questions better
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Originally posted by ChimpMaster View PostYou could always contact the buyer directly, explain the issue and ask if they are still interested.
But I agree with a previous poster in that the price is likely to have gone up over the past 4 months: we have seen around a 5% to 8% increase in parts the SE in just the past 3 months. A lot of this is due to investors rushing to buy before the SDLT surcharge kicks in, but they seem to be overpaying as far as I am concerned.
It could however present you with an opportunity to get another £20k or so.
Next option is to look at LTB since I really don't want to lose the house I've had an offer accepted on.
Edit: scratch that - SDLT will apply to the new purchaseLast edited by Gumbo Robot; 3 March 2016, 22:00.
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Originally posted by Gumbo Robot View PostThere are private firms that do this & are much quicker. It really does appear that this particular solicitor spent weeks doing f all.
Oh, and thanks :-)
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Originally posted by Lightwave View PostHopefully your solicitor was no deal, no fee?
They are mostly fairly useless.
I expect the septic tank was just used as a delaying tactic.
If the buyer was committed to completing the deal, they'd just have asked for you to get it emptied, or got a quote for emptying and suggested knocking that off the price.
I have a couple of mates' who have issues selling properties due solicitors not doing their jobs.
In both cases it seemed the solicitor didn't understand the type of property the person was buying so were asking for things that were irrelevant to the sale and doing it very slowly.
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Next time keep have some contact details of your buyer and say if there is a delay to contact you directly. That way if either solicitors or the estate agent starts dragging their feet or talking rubbish you can talk to each other direct and sort the issue out.
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You could always contact the buyer directly, explain the issue and ask if they are still interested.
But I agree with a previous poster in that the price is likely to have gone up over the past 4 months: we have seen around a 5% to 8% increase in parts the SE in just the past 3 months. A lot of this is due to investors rushing to buy before the SDLT surcharge kicks in, but they seem to be overpaying as far as I am concerned.
It could however present you with an opportunity to get another £20k or so.
Leave a comment:
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