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Previously on "Another stealth tax???"

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  • The Lone Gunman
    replied
    Originally posted by Pondlife
    The idea of a seller having to prove that their house is worth what they're selling it for is a good thing. Buyers have far more security in getting the ridiculous mortgage they need to buy the place if it’s already been surveyed. It of course won’t stop gazzumping unless we adopt the Scottish system but it doesn’t look likely at the moment.

    The problem is that the ‘just drove past and had a quick look’ survey will only be based on recent prices of homes sold in that postcode and will have no real reflection on the condition of the home, so the more conscientious buyer will still get their own survey anyway.


    Just my £0.02 though.
    Why should house sellers be any different to other vendors?
    Buyers will still need independant surveys, you dont think the lenders are going to accept the vendors survey do you?
    It wont matter if the survey is as detailed as fook, it will still have a cop out of "but we might have missed something" or "obviously we can't garauntee".

    The house is worth what the buyer will pay and as with all other purchases "caveat emptor".

    Leave a comment:


  • Mailman
    replied
    Originally posted by Fungus
    I agree that Gazumping laws are needed. Apparently you can drop out of a sale right up until you exchange contracts.
    This is correct and wrong on so many levels!

    Lets hope the Government passes the second "sensible" law since it has come to power shortly. The first law was the one they passed to get rid of the goon protesting outside parliament!

    Mailman

    Leave a comment:


  • Pondlife
    replied
    My £0.02

    The idea of a seller having to prove that their house is worth what they're selling it for is a good thing. Buyers have far more security in getting the ridiculous mortgage they need to buy the place if it’s already been surveyed. It of course won’t stop gazzumping unless we adopt the Scottish system but it doesn’t look likely at the moment.

    The problem is that the ‘just drove past and had a quick look’ survey will only be based on recent prices of homes sold in that postcode and will have no real reflection on the condition of the home, so the more conscientious buyer will still get their own survey anyway.


    Just my £0.02 though.

    Leave a comment:


  • Joe Black
    replied
    Gazumping...

    Originally posted by Mailman
    Actually the only law that needs to be passed is the one that makes accepting a verbal offer binding.

    Its just a joke how you can spend so much time in trying to buy a house only to have the owner turn around at a seconds notice to say they are selling to someone else.
    Agree. If they wanted to do something useful re the housing market, it wouldn't be some gimmicky brochure, which you might end up having to pay someone else to verify in the first place, it would be to reform the whole gazumping, conditional offers, dependant upon financing b*llocks in the UK.

    Leave a comment:


  • OwlHoot
    replied
    Originally posted by Fungus
    I'm not keen. Not many buyers would trust a survey commissioned by the seller. And nor would the lender. So they will have to commission their own. And if the house takes time to sell, the original survey could be a year or more out of date. So a new one would be needed.

    But it does have the advantage that the house will not go on the market without some assurance that it is okay. I had to sell my late mother's house, and the first buyer pulled out when his house failed the survey after he had found a buyer.

    I agree that Gazumping laws are needed. Apparently you can drop out of a sale right up until you exchange contracts.
    You can drop out right up to completion, except that once contracts have been exchanged if the purchasor drops out then they generally lose their deposit.

    Leave a comment:


  • bogeyman
    replied
    Originally posted by threaded
    They have them in Denmark. Wish I'd read mine a bit closer and got the conversion from hectares to acres the right way round. Wanted a big garden, ended up buying a big farm (came with staff luckily).
    Well, who else could buy a farm by accident?

    Do you race your 'lambos' around a dirt track like that lottery-winning 'king of chavs' ?

    You're so full of sh17 it hurts

    Leave a comment:


  • AtW
    replied
    Originally posted by John Galt
    But this has just passed the burden of the survey costs from the buyer to the seller
    Which is perfectly logical because seller has got same real estate that many buyers may want.

    Leave a comment:


  • sunnysan
    replied
    Its great

    Well they are OK in principle

    So Tony,.....

    Under you we have eroded civil liberties, turned a foreign reserve surplus into a deficit, bloated public services with no improvement, disincentivised eutrapeneurship, increased taxes by stealth, involved us an illegal war, let crime increase..... BUT .... we now have HIP so everything is OK. Thanks dude

    Leave a comment:


  • Fungus
    replied
    I'm not keen. Not many buyers would trust a survey commissioned by the seller. And nor would the lender. So they will have to commission their own. And if the house takes time to sell, the original survey could be a year or more out of date. So a new one would be needed.

    But it does have the advantage that the house will not go on the market without some assurance that it is okay. I had to sell my late mother's house, and the first buyer pulled out when his house failed the survey after he had found a buyer.

    I agree that Gazumping laws are needed. Apparently you can drop out of a sale right up until you exchange contracts.

    Leave a comment:


  • Fungus
    replied
    Originally posted by threaded
    They have them in Denmark. Wish I'd read mine a bit closer and got the conversion from hectares to acres the right way round. Wanted a big garden, ended up buying a big farm (came with staff luckily).
    I assume you got "Droits de seigneur"?

    Leave a comment:


  • MrsGoof
    replied
    Originally posted by John Galt
    But this has just passed the burden of the survey costs from the buyer to the seller .
    Except that the level of the Survey may be only the simplist and least probong of the building.

    I Certainly would not jsut accept this. I'd always want a survey that said more that 'I looks Ok from across the road"

    I don't thik this wil stop gazzumping either, it willjust speed up gazzumpig as potential buyers will have more informatino to hand immediatly so can get their fat contractor walletts and upset the poorer peopl;e in society.


    Note to pedants: I know I can't type and spell at the same time

    Leave a comment:


  • John Galt
    replied
    Originally posted by AtW
    Anything that is "fixed", ie unchangeable over period of time (which can be small as when house is on sale it can have lots of interested parties over short period of time) should be paid once and for all rather than have buyers pay it more than once: its inefficiency in the system that only benefits parasites that provide no added value.
    But this has just passed the burden of the survey costs from the buyer to the seller - if we adopted the Scottish system so there was no chance of gazzumping the cost would only be paid once.

    Leave a comment:


  • AtW
    replied
    Originally posted by John Galt
    Homes don't move but their conditions and energy efficiency will change.
    Anything that is "fixed", ie unchangeable over period of time (which can be small as when house is on sale it can have lots of interested parties over short period of time) should be paid once and for all rather than have buyers pay it more than once: its inefficiency in the system that only benefits parasites that provide no added value.

    Leave a comment:


  • John Galt
    replied
    Originally posted by AtW
    It makes perfect sense - why should same procedures to be done about same house every time someone is interested, its not like house gets moved or something.
    But look what the pack will (possibly) include:


    However, sellers or estate agents acting for vendors will be required to assemble lots of legal documents.

    They could include a copy of the lease on leasehold properties, and evidence of ownership such as title deeds.

    Sellers will also be obliged to have a "home condition" report, a type of structural survey.

    New requirements such as an energy efficiency assessment may also be included.

    Homes don't move but their conditions and energy efficiency will change. And what about all the land searches etc that the buyer currently purchases through his solicitor - presumably these will still be required. Seems to me that it's just a way of forcing people to have a survey - according to the radio earlier if you do not have a pack you will be fined £200 per day that your house is on the market without one. See, it's all in the fine print!

    Leave a comment:


  • Mailman
    replied
    Actually the only law that needs to be passed is the one that makes accepting a verbal offer binding.

    Its just a joke how you can spend so much time in trying to buy a house only to have the owner turn around at a seconds notice to say they are selling to someone else.

    Im also certain this has added to the bloat in house prices as well.

    However, seeing this is England, it appears that anything that relates to a sensible law is in fact banned in this country!

    Mailman

    Leave a comment:

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