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BUYING PROPERTY ADVICE NOTES
(1991-2002/3/4/5/6 Edition © Shoarns - intended only for clients of Shoarns Solicitors)

These advice notes are exclusively provided for our private clients. All rights are reserved and no reproduction from them or from our internet web site for any other purpose is permitted without our permission. THE AUTHORS OF THIS WEB SITE  ACCEPT NO RESPONSIBILITY FOR  UNAUTHORISED  COPYING OR USE OF THE CONTENTS OF THIS PAGE WITHOUT PERMISSION IN ANY CIRCUMSTANCES.

CONTENTS:


l. PRIVATE SURVEY
2. LOCAL AUTHORITY SEARCH
3. BOUNDARIES
4. UNUSUAL FEATURES OF PROPERTY
5. MORTGAGE
6. INFORMAL ARRANGEMENTS WITH YOUR SELLER
7. FIXTURES AND FITTINGS
8. FUTURE USE OF PROPERTY AND ALTERATIONS
9. REPORTING TO YOU & PROGRESS
10. REMOVAL ARRANGEMENTS
11. FIRE INSURANCE
12. DEPOSIT
13. DEPENDENT SALE
l4. FROM CONTRACT TO COMPLETION
15. JOINT PURCHASES
16. MONEY MATTERS
17. DEEDS
18. WILLS

PURCHASE NOTES

These notes are provided as practical advice for you to read and to retain to assist you during the course of your purchase. We know from experience that they should answer many of the most common queries our clients have and should help smooth your path. If you are in doubt at all on any point please contact us for advice. Obviously advice appropriate to your particular purchase transaction will be readily provided as the matter progresses.

We shall try to keep you advised on progress and you may rest assured that if any serious problem comes to our attention during the course of the transaction you will be notified immediately. Please feel free to contact us at any time about the current position but try not to expect unreasonable time scales. There are hundreds of individual steps on both sides to be attended to (multiplied by the number of chain transactions) - most, you will be relieved to hear, you will never have to concern yourself with, as they are dealt with for you by lawyers but you may find the table at the end useful as a guide to the sequence of events in an average transaction (not all the steps may be appropriate to your transaction of course).

A final point to mention before going on. You will find that we keep careful records of personal details on a computer database here. The accuracy of these records is vital to us and to the progress of your transaction. Please check them very carefully and let us know of errors and omissions. Try to remember to keep them up to date. If you move we will need to know where. For example it is really surprising how many clients we discover (usually late in the transaction) who have not told us all their correct names, drop names, use different spellings of their names or nicknames apparently interchangeably or tell their Lenders one version of their names and tell us something different. If you are not sure of your own names check your passport and try to stick to these at least until we have finished your transaction!

As your transaction progresses we shall provide you with advice notes and reminders when important steps are reached. We can provide these earlier on request.

Time has moved on enormously bringing many changes since the first edition of these notes 25 years go and we now can email instantaneously almost all letters legal forms and advice notes to those who use the internet. We are moving towards totally electronic conveyancing but it is likely to be a few years before it is achieved.

l 1. PRIVATE SURVEY

1. Need for a survey of building

2. Special reports

3. New properties

4. National House Building & similar Guarantees

You are strongly recommended to obtain a full independent Building Survey of the property from a Chartered Surveyor if you are buying a house that is not new. Even if you consider that the property is sound yourself you must realise that the property may have hidden defects which can only be discovered by an expert. We shall be happy to recommend someone to you to carry out a survey for you. You will have to pay his fee whether you proceed or not but this is modest compared with the cost of remedying a severe defect in the property which might otherwise be missed. If you are buying a house or a flat there is a special type of "RICS/ISVA HomeBuyer Survey and Valuation" available from Chartered Surveyors which you can take advantage of at a moderate cost. Sometimes it is possible to combine a Lenders Valuation with such a survey or report and as this should be more economic you are recommended to ask your Lender about this as it may not always be offered to you voluntarily.

Please do not send us full or lengthy Survey Reports or Valuation Reports as it is not practical for us to read them (you will appreciate they mainly cover matters unrelated to our conveyancing work). If though, after you have received and carefully read your Survey/Valuation, you wish us to take up any specifically legal points on your Survey/Valuation with us please just send a written note setting out your query or quoting the points you want us to advise upon or provide a photocopy of the relevant page or two containing specific conveyancing queries you or your Surveyor/Valuer has raised. Surveyors and Valuers often include a general section titled something like "Legal & Other Matters" which you may care to copy to us if it contains any specific matters which we may need to consider.

You are also recommended to ask a competent engineer to inspect any facilities (e.g. drains fitted electrical apparatus or central heating system) you are acquiring with the property and you should ensure that where appropriate these have been properly serviced in the past. It is quite common for Buyers to discover faulty, even occasionally dangerous, fixtures appliances and equipment in property they are buying and the responsibility rests with you alone to have this thoroughly checked. It is also wise to have the electrical system checked and this should be considered essential if the property is over, say, twenty years old.

Freehold properties less than ten years old and new properties should have a National House Builders Council Buildmark Guarantee. Broadly, following completion, the 10 year N.H.B.C. Buildmark Cover provides that the N.H.B.C. will guarantee the property against building defects (falling below NHBC standards) during the first two years of cover and thereafter provides a guarantee only against structural defects (i.e. those affecting the load bearing structure of the property). If the property was inspected for Local Authority Building Control purposes during construction there are certain other safeguards. There are other benefits from the NHBC Buildmark Guarantee. If applicable full information will be provided before you are committed at exchange of contracts. A Certificate is provided following completion. A similar sort of Guarantee on new houses is also offered elsewhere notably by Zurich Insurance.

l 2. LOCAL AUTHORITY & OTHER SEARCHES

1. Nuisances

2. Use of nearby property

3. Services

It is wise to check use of adjacent and nearby property in case there is any activity which might interfere with your enjoyment of the property after you have acquired it. Consider carefully whether you will be happy putting up with a possible nuisance, e.g. a busy road, school or public house. Note that the searches and enquiries that we make on your behalf relate exclusively to the property you are buying and do not deal with the use of nearby properties. If you suspect that there might be a change of use of adjacent or nearby land in the future, or if there is vacant land and you are concerned about this, then we must be told so that we can make specific enquiries. A sketch plan showing the land with which you are concerned will help us to locate the same. We shall need to have this information as early as possible to allow us to make enquiries and an additional fee may be incurred to the Local Authority. Alternatively you could, perhaps more quickly and simply, pay a visit to the local authority planning department (usually the District Authority) and ask to look through their file of planning applications for the neighbourhood which should give you a wider check than the standard conveyancing process permits. There are special searches we can make during the course of a transaction these days which you will be advised about at the appropriate times.

Try to visit the property which you wish to buy at least twice on different days and at different times of day. On the second or subsequent occasions you will be better able to judge a property critically.

If you finally decide to change your mind and look for somewhere else to buy do not hesitate do let us and everyone else e.g. estate agent involved know of your decision.

Gas electricity and telephone connections are normally obvious and no separate enquiry is normally made of each separate authority which would be time consuming, expensive and unnecessary in the vast majority of cases unless you especially request us to do so. Do however check this and let us know if you are in any doubt - we would be concerned, for example, if any such service appeared to cross neighbouring property.

A recent additional type of optional Search that can be provided for you if you wish is to make checks on the past history of the land and for environmental hazards.

INTERNET USERS TIPS

http://www.homecheck.co.uk/
http://www.upmystreet.com
http://www.streetmap.co.uk/


l 3. BOUNDARIES

1. Position of boundaries

2. Checking plans

It is usually possible for us to supply you or your surveyor with a plan of the property you are buying early on if you wish. We cannot normally measure and check boundaries on the ground personally and it must ultimately be your responsibility to check for discrepancies and bring these to our attention before you are committed to buy but it is unusual for this to cause difficulties as the approximate boundaries of most properties are normally obvious. You will be provided during the course of a transaction with a plan to approve.

INTERNET USERS TIP
We can email virtually anything to you in various formats and we recommend you have Adobe Reader installed on your computer to view and print out - it is free for download at
 http://www.adobe.com/acrobat



l 4. UNUSUAL MATTERS

1. Tell us about the out of the ordinary!

2. Occupiers

If the property has any unusual features e.g. access is shared, services cross other property before reaching the public main, the property is crossed by a footpath, property walls which abut or are very close to boundaries and which cannot be repaired or maintained without access from neighbouring property, unusual parking arrangements etc. then you should advise us as soon as possible so that we may give these matters special consideration.

Have any structural alterations been made to the property? Please let us have details with dates.

The Seller must give vacant possession upon completion and private arrangements to allow them to stay or continue to store items after completion are dangerous!

If the Estate Agents Particulars are incorrect please let us have details of the discrepancy.

l 5. MORTGAGE

1. Tell us the name and address of proposed lender(s) as soon as possible.

2. Advise your lender we are your Solicitors and give them our name and full address contact details etc.

If you are applying or have made application for a mortgage please advise the lending institution of our name and address. We can often supply a panel number to help you if you ask.

Note that you are responsible for our fees for acting for the Bank or the Building Society and these will be shown (as inclusive or otherwise)  on any estimate you request. We are panel solicitors for the vast majority of lending institutions but on the odd occasion when we are not panel solicitors we shall need to make special arrangements and provide a separate estimate - we can sometimes arrange this on specially reduced terms.

We reserve the right, for security reasons, to bring to the attention of your Lender any information or matter that comes to our attention ( and whether this comes from you the borrower or from any source) which we consider might potentially adversely affect the security being offered to your Lender.

If you are offered any incentive(s) by your Seller (often Builders or brokers) e.g. price reductions or free fixtures and fittings or something else (sometimes quite complicated arrangements are proposed which basically mean you are paying less than the basic purchase price in the documentation known to your Lender) then these will need to be reported to your Lenders and approved by them in advance of completion of your mortgage advance.

Another point to watch out for is that mortgage offers from lending institutions often have a time limit. Three or six months is quite commonplace. If your purchase is extended over a long time period for some reason it is up to you to keep an eye on this as as you may have to renew your application to your Lender if it may expires before completion.

Please note our remarks on insuring your property later in these notes if you are obtaining a mortgage.

INTERNET USERS TIP
Most Lenders these days adopt the rules laid down in The Council For Mortgage Lenders Handbook. Part 1 rules are general. Part 2 rules are your specific Lenders variations. You can see these for yourself at:- 
http://www.cml.org.uk/ and follow CML Handbook links or
http://www.cml.org.uk/servlet/dycon/zt-cml/cml/live/en/cml/ms_handbook

You will need Adobe Acrobat Reader - free for download at
 http://www.adobe.com/acrobat




l 6. INFORMAL ARRANGEMENTS

1. Avoid committing to writing.

2. Tell us!

3. "Subject to Contract" correspondence

It is recommended that we are advised of all arrangements made directly between you and the Seller so that we can have them confirmed by the Seller's solicitor in writing. Correspondence with your Seller should always be marked "Subject to Contract".

Tell us of any special arrangements with the Seller as they will not be binding unless they are agreed in writing with the Seller's Solicitors or, better still, are in the contract.

l 7. FIXTURES AND FITTINGS

1. What is included and what is not.

2. Checking what the Seller is leaving behind

3. Checks on completion day

Before exchange of contracts the Seller will put in writing what is to be included in the sale under the terms of the purchase contract. Sometimes Sellers change their minds so you cannot rely just on the Agents Particulars. Usually the Seller will have completed a Fixtures Fittings and Contents Questionnaire referred to in the contract.

There can be grey area but a good starting point is the Fixtures Fittings and Contents Questionnaire normally indicates to you:-
(i) What is included in the property sale price. These are generally referred to as  fixtures and fittings. but they can be better described perhaps as permanent and semi-permanent things or more bluntly things that you cannot simply pick up and walk off with. Television aerials, doors, oak trees, fitted carpets and the cat flap (not the cat though) fall in this category.
(ii) What the Seller is treating separately and offering to sell you. The seller might want to sell you some things which are not fixtures and fittings like a standalone cooker or sit-on lawn mower or the cat.

If a separate price is negotiated and agreed it will usually be shown in the the contract as 'chattels' in a separate price box so watch out it is not overlooked when you come to sign. No Stamp Duty Land Tax will be payable by you on this payment if the item is genuinely not a fixture and fitting falling within (i). The price must be reasonable of course and not a sham designed to evade paying Stamp Duty Land Tax. Otherwise of course you could divide up the house price into £12,000 for the bathroom, £30,000 for the kitchen etc to evade the Tax!

Don't forget you will have to sign a complex Stamp Duty Land Transaction Return for the Inland Revenue which declares the truth about the price around completion time.

We cannot approve the reasonableness of the price attributed to items ourselves.

(iii) What is not included in the sale (in other words what will not be there when you move in).

If at all possible on the morning of completion day you or someone responsible on your behalf should check that no items are being removed from the property you are buying which should be left and that the condition of the property is generally satisfactory. Please advise us immediately of any difficulty as we cannot check the property personally and we shall proceed to complete the transaction upon the assumption that everything is in order unless we hear from you to the contrary.

l 8. FUTURE USE OF PROPERTY

Tell us your plans for the property. We shall assume that if you are buying residential property you will be using it for residential purposes. If you want it for a guest house or kindergarten planning permission and perhaps building regulation approval will be required. If you want to install replacement windows be aware of conservation area restrictions. Some planning consents for residential property expressly exclude the provisions of the general development order and you might still have to obtain planning permission. There may be some restriction in the deeds, a covenant, which forbids changes or imposes conditions to be considered.

If you have any plans to use the property otherwise than as a single private dwellinghouse or for development or you are making any substantial alterations or additions to the property in the future please let us know so that we may give this special consideration and advise you. It is surprising how important this information can be to us so give the matter careful thought.

To give an example it is amazing how many Sellers claim not to have the faintest idea where the pipes and wires lie under their property or, indeed, how they get to their property in the first place. If you want to build an extension it may be expensive to move services if it turns out they are in the wrong place.

Another example would be expansion of a garden into a paddock or farmland for which planning permission would have (or will) be required. This would need special attention.

Unless you tell us otherwise we shall assume you are intending to live in the property, use it as a single private dwellinghouse with garden and that you have no plans to build additions at the property.

l 9. REPORTING BEFORE CONTRACT & PROGRESS

1. Client report on legal matters

2. Signing the Contract

3. Handling Estate Agents & Brokers

When we consider that we have sufficient information to report about your proposed purchase we will normally send you a formal property report with copies of any relevant documentation and legal papers to sign. If required these matters may, of course, be discussed with you personally.

Buying a property is usually a two stage process and at about this time you will be asked to sign the Contract (sometimes referred to as an Agreement) for your Purchase preparatory to exchanging contracts which fixes a completion date. The final is transfer to you is later upon 'completion' - the completion date agreed in this Contract.

We are often asked about timescales and as a rough guide (every transaction is different) we are normally able to give you a report on most of the documentation within about a fortnight of receiving all necessary documentation (contract copy deeds plans etc) from the Seller's Solicitors. If you want to move faster or slower however please let us know and we will try to help..

Sometimes Sellers and third party agents seek to impose, before or during the course of a transaction, unilateral and arbitrary conditions (or perhaps threats) that require exchange of contracts by or before a certain date sometimes combined with various inducements in the form of threats to withdraw from a sale, remarket, sell to another interested party, a price reduction or threat of a price hike. Builders and sellers Estate Agents are particularly prone to this form of unfair leverage. We cannot in any circumstances accept responsibility for meeting these deadlines or for the consequences of any failure to do so. It is, in the end, your decision if you wish to proceed to exchange and the degree of risk you are prepared to accept by going ahead early. Obviously though if you are dependent on a mortgage you cannot waive compliance with your lenders conditions for using their money.

Please note that where property is being bought by spouses, partners and joint buyers it is on the basis that we may take and act on instructions on all aspects of the transaction from one buyer rather than all. If this is not acceptable and joint consultation is always required please let us know so we may note up our file. The contract will, of course, be in the name of the buyers to be named eventually on the Land Registry title and they will all have to sign it.

There is no need for you to be present at exchange of contracts or completion.

Hassle: OED "Origin uncertain, perhaps a blend of haggle and tussle. ... Bother, pester, harass (a person)."

The 'proper' chain of communication during your purchase (to avoid confusion, pointless work and misunderstandings) is between Solicitors. 

Your Buyer pays their own Solicitor to keep them informed on progress and you do not have to speak to them about the legal aspects of the transaction. They should never have to contact you and you should not need to contact them directly.

Estate Agents Mortgage Brokers etc acting for parties up and down a chain of transactions can be a troublesome nuisance and waste everyones time. If you can - take no notice and refer them to us - or better still their own clients' Solicitors -  to reduce stress. Estate Agents and Brokers should be asked only to fax or email any queries to us so we can check their bona fides, establish that we have your authority to disclose information including your personal information and refer to our internal progress agendas before replying. This also gives us a permanent paper record of what has been said. They should use either our standard fax number or email address if they want a speedy and definitive response.

l  10. REMOVAL ARRANGEMENTS

1. When to arrange

2. Time of completion

3. Keys

Removal arrangements should only be made firm after exchange of contracts when the completion date has been fixed. Fix it sooner only at your risk of cancellation loss.

It is not possible to be specific usually about time of completion on a completion day. Although every endeavour will be made to try to achieve this as early as possible but very occasionally completion may take place in the afternoon especially if a conveyancing "chain" of transactions is involved.

We should be able to tell you what the Seller's Solicitors say the Seller will do with keys (if you are not making arrangements direct) close to completion day. Often they are left with estate agents but this means you will have to collect them during office hours.

There is no need for you to be present at completion.

l 11. FIRE INSURANCE

1. When to insure

2. Amount of insurance

3. Contents insurance

4. Insuring when a mortgage is involved.

5. New properties

6. Flats or leasehold properties

Note that after exchange of Contracts and before legal completion you are firmly committed to buying the property it is probably then at your risk. This may come as a  surprise, so think about it carefully. Insurance must be effected for the property and its fittings against fire and similar perils from the time of exchange of contracts not completion day. Fortunately insurance brokers/companies will be geared up to thhis situation.

You are responsible for adequacy of insurance. If in doubt you should take professional advice on rebuilding costs. Insurance should be in the full replacement value of the property, index linked, and should include architect's fees and other expenses which might be incurred in the event of a property loss.

Contents insurance is not, of course, necessary until legal completion has taken place except on fittings you are buying e.g. carpets.

If you are taking out a new mortgage but not intending to insure your new property through the Lender's arrangements please advise us as soon as possible of the arrangements and let us have the Policy itself as soon as it is available. If your Lender is not insuring and you are not able to supply them with an acceptable Policy Schedule as proof Lenders will require us to obtain proof of cover - complying both with your mortgage offer conditions and the requirements set out in the Council for Mortgage Lenders handbook (see Internet Users Tip) - from your insurance company or broker which can take time and lead to delays. Unfortunately self-certification is not possible. Ask for the appropriate form from us as early as possible. Alternatively your lender ought to be able to pre-approve your independent insurance and be able to confirm this to us. You have been warned!

Special arrangements apply to new properties as generally insurance is only required as from legal completion.

In the case of flats often the Landlord will have arranged insurance. You will see a copy of the Policy to check. Fixtures and fittings only would be required to be insured, we suggest, as from exchange of contracts for safety.

INTERNET USERS TIP
This web site contains much useful information about leasehold property with many information leaflets:  
http://www.lease-advice.org/newintro.htm


l 12. DEPOSIT

1. Amount

2. Reduced deposit

3. Purpose

It is usual and customary, upon exchange of Contracts, for a deposit of 10% of the purchase price to be paid to the Sellers Solicitor's.

Occasionally a lesser deposit may be accepted by the Seller - especially from first time buyers or those obtaining a mortgage for a high percentage of the purchase price. Please let us know as early as possible if you wish to ask the Seller to agree to a reduced deposit as we must ask if this is acceptable to the Seller. Note it cannot automatically be assumed that the deposit we receive on any dependent sale will be available to pay your purchase deposit (but it may well be) nor that a deposit of less than 10% of the price will be acceptable to the Seller.

Should you default on the contract and fail to complete, amongst other things, you risk forfeiture of this deposit - this is the point of paying a deposit in the first place! This situation is extremely rare however. Even if you pay a deposit of less than 10% for some reason upon exchange of contracts the contract very often will state that if you default you will be liable to make up the deposit to a full 10%.

l 13. DEPENDENT SALE

If you are also selling a property we shall ensure (unless instructed otherwise) that exchange of contracts for any dependent sale and your purchase are simultaneous and that the same date is fixed for completion of both transactions.

Information about selling properties is contained in a separate companion set of information notes.

l 14. FROM CONTRACT TO COMPLETION

1. Completion date

2. Conveyancing work

3. Drawing down mortgage advances

The point at which the contract you signed earlier (but left undated) is actually dated and finally made binding upon you is known as exchange of contracts. We will do this as your agent when everything is agreed over the telephone with your Sellers Solicitors.  At that point in time you are committed.

We shall act as your agent in exchanging Contracts on your behalf when we have your instructions to proceed to do so. We shall naturally obtain your instructions on the proposed completion day.

There is no fixed rule as to how long after exchange of Contracts completion date shall be, but a date between 10 and 28 days is normally feasible. It is a detail for the parties to come to an agreement over. That date is incorporated into the contract as a binding term.  If you are obtaining a mortgage advance note very often Lenders require 7 clear working days notice which can only be given after exchange of contracts (when we report to your lenders and certify the title to the property) before they can release mortgage funds to us for completion day. In order for us to have funds early on completion day it is common for your mortgage advance to be sent to us by your Lender by Bank Transfer. As this might arrive late in the day and delay your completion this may at our option be requisitioned the working day before the scheduled completion day.

It is up to you to notify the Electricity and British Telecom (and other Service Authorities) to have supplies connected or continued in your name as necessary.

Communication between us will be important to make your move to your new house as smooth as possible. Please let us know if your telephone fax or mobile phone will not be checked or connected for any length of time. An advantage of modern email is that it can be picked up from your mail box from a computer or mobile phone even anywhere in the world. We can only keep a single email address for you at any one time and an alternative address in case of emergency e.g. your mail box is full and an email is returned.

Your contract will specify not just (as we have seen) a completion date but also a completion time. 2pm is usual but sellers Solicitors will often try to persuade you (if they can) to accept an earlier time. This is the time on completion day by which your sellers should, by contract, vacate the property you are buying so, when you are signing, make sure you are clear about this. By the same token this time is when your sellers solicitor will expect to have received your money. In a conveyancers' utopia, at that instant, your sellers (with family and pets) would exit the front gate with their furniture and your sellers solicitor money would magically receive your money at the bank. Unfortunately the process is not a predictable science. Human beings and banks are involved for a start. Be prepared for waiting around as the occasional late completion happens.

If there is a chain involved then the further up the chain you are the more likely to find yourself with a long delay. Failure by buyers to complete at all is very rare (we will not dwell on it) but must say that the risk is at its greatest in long chains where you are at or towards the top of it. After all several completions (with bank transfers) involving dozens of individual steps need to take place before yours in the space of a few hours. Any weak or slow link can make the difference.  If you are concerned about this situation let us know.

Fridays, by the way, are particularly slow days for transmitting money between banks and are best avoided if you possibly can.

l 15. JOINT PURCHASES

1. Ownership shares

2. Other methods of owning property

In the case of a joint purchase - most commonly a purchase by husband and wife - we arrange for the transfer of the property into joint names as "Joint Tenants". This legal term means that on the death of either joint owner the property automatically vests in the survivor notwithstanding the terms of the deceased's will. Please advise us as soon as possible if this is not your wish.

Partners should consider whether they wish to hold property as tenants in common, giving them distinct shares in the property and let us know if this requirement is their preference. Other methods of sharing occupation and interests in property can be arranged e.g. under simple trusts or cohabitation agreements if appropriate. Please ask for advice. See also later about Wills.

l 16. MONEY MATTERS

1. Providing us with funds

2. Cheque clearance times

There may well be several occasions during the course of a transaction when we shall require funds from you.

You can pay by cheque drawn on a UK Clearing Bank. Cheques should normally be payable to Shoarns Solicitors. It is important to bear in mind that, it takes at least seven clear working days for a cheque and even Building Society cheques or Bankers Drafts to clear so that cleared funds are actually received into our Solicitors Client Account and available to be drawn against to fund your transaction. Unfortunately even special clearance of cheques does not solve the problem (in fact it may delay final cheque clearance).

We do not currently recommend using an alternative system known as B.A.C.S. (normally used apparently for bulk bank transfers) which you may be offered because when we receive the funds by this method we are not advised of receipt and there is a 24 hour clearance time according to our Bankers Natwest.

Unfortunately, because of complications introduced by money laundering and anti-fraud laws introduced in recent years by the UK Government and EEC we no longer accept cash payments or credits for sums over £250. This includes cash deposits direct into our Client Account unless a UK Clearing Bank can confirm in writing the source of your funds. We are sorry if this causes inconvenience however the reason for this is to avoid having to investigate the source and possibly disclose a substantial cash transaction to the National Criminal Intelligence Service!

Normally you will be provided with a completion statement from us before completion if we need funds from you for a purchase and instructions for making payments are on statement including information like our Bankers details if appropriate.

l 17. TITLE DEEDS

Note that following completion of a property purchase the change of ownership will need to be registered at H.M. Land Registry. This can take from a few weeks to several months to complete.

Most properties will be registered at Land Registry. No Certificate is issued nowadays (old Certificates are now worthless) and the concept of title deeds is obsolete for registered properties. The abolition of title deeds is part of an ongoing process towards electronic conveyancing. If you wish to prove ownership an official copy (Title Information Document) can be obtained from Land Registry. This copy is dated and is on watermarked paper.

During your purchase you will have been supplied with documentation or copies of  documentation and these should always be retained carefully for when your property is eventually sold.

The vast number of old title deeds are obsolete and (with a few exceptions) are not normally retained unless you are particularly interested in keeping them out of historical interest.
 
l 18. WILLS

You are reminded that upon completion of your new purchase it is advisable for you to make a Will or to consider any necessary revisions to an existing Will that you may have already made. We shall be pleased to advise and prepare a new Will for you as you wish.

A short Client Questionnaire needs to be completed so we can prepare a Will or Wills for you. The legal costs involved are extremely modest.

We hope these notes assist you in your transaction. If it all sounds like a complicated nightmare it need not be.

We have tried to make them straightforward and practical and we hope we have avoided giving the impression you have been given a crash course in Conveyancing law!

Try to remain relaxed, pay a little care and attention to the timescales and details and your transaction should be fine. Remember that our client's (indeed  many people like you throughout England and Wales) move house day in and day out and most transactions run smoothly. This does not happen by chance. Solicitors work hard throughout to make it happen.
 
The most important matter to remember however is that if in any doubt you should ask as every sale is different.

These advice notes are exclusively provided for our private clients. All rights are reserved and no reproduction from them or from our internet web site for any other purpose is permitted without our permission. THE AUTHORS OF THIS WEB SITE  ACCEPT NO RESPONSIBILITY FOR  UNAUTHORISED  COPYING OR USE OF THE CONTENTS OF THIS PAGE WITHOUT PERMISSION IN ANY CIRCUMSTANCES.

 

 

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