Buying a house. Problem with boundary

Buying a house. Problem with boundary

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Steve vRS

Original Poster:

4,870 posts

243 months

Friday 10th February 2017
quotequote all
I am quite far through the conveyancing process (mortgage offer in place, searches and survey paid for) and my solicitor has identified that there is a boundary issue.

Basically it is an end chain house and the house beside mine has an access path that goes around the back of my garden and down the side of my house to the front road. My garden gate opens onto this path as does the side door to the garage. The assumption was that this was a shared path however on further investigation, it turns out the path belongs to the adjoining house. So, every time I walked out of my back garden or garage, I'd be trespassing.

Now this is a fairly new house so there is the chance that it is an error which can be rectified by the selller with the land registry. If this can't be done, would you still buy the house? I've been told you can insure against this causing future problems but it has made me nervous. I'm separating from my wife and have sold our house so time is of the essence but I'm not hugely emotionally attached to the house, it was just the best at the time.

Steve vRS

Original Poster:

4,870 posts

243 months

Friday 10th February 2017
quotequote all
If it's not a mistake and the path belongs solely to the neighbour, would you pull ou?

Steve vRS

Original Poster:

4,870 posts

243 months

Friday 10th February 2017
quotequote all
desolate said:
Are you sure you don't have rights to pass over the path?

If the fact the path exists doesn't put you off, you could get the vendor to buy an indemnity policy to cover you if it ever goes sour.
My solicitor said that's one option. How do they work? If I can't sell the house cause of this, how does it pay out?

Steve vRS

Original Poster:

4,870 posts

243 months

Friday 10th February 2017
quotequote all
Hmm.

I think I willl say if it is an error, sort it out and I'll accept the delay in the sale process providing my buyers can live with the delay. If it is not a mistake and I need to get it confirmed legally that I can access the path, then if this delays the process so long that it threatens my house sale, I may have to withdraw (Fnarr).

Just what I needed.

Steve vRS

Original Poster:

4,870 posts

243 months

Saturday 11th February 2017
quotequote all
Thanks for the offer.

I think I will tell my solicitor that I want it resolved so that the title of the house makes it explicit that the path is shared between the houses. If this can't be done then it looks like I'll be booking viewings again.


Steve vRS

Original Poster:

4,870 posts

243 months

Monday 20th February 2017
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I still cannot get a satisfactory answer from my sellers solicitor about this plus it now turns out that an extension and driveway that have been added to thhouse have not got permission from the landlord (leasehold house). What could the consequence of this be?

I think I may be withdrawing.

Steve vRS

Original Poster:

4,870 posts

243 months

Monday 20th February 2017
quotequote all
No emotional attachment at all but I cannot let the sale of our house fall through so I may have to rent as it's unlikely I will find somewhere else in time.

Steve vRS

Original Poster:

4,870 posts

243 months

Monday 20th February 2017
quotequote all
Murph7355 said:
Walk and rent somewhere would be my instinct.

Path:

- do you need the access it in theory has?
- does the path have right of access? (Your solicitor would, in theory, have asked about that)
- can right of access be gained?

Answer yes to (1) and no to the other 2 then walk smile An indemnity policy may work for this one, but they're always a bit of a bodge IMO.

Extension planning:

- in theory the council could make you take them down
- in practice I doubt they will, depending of course on what's been built and when!
- you can get indemnity policies for these too

If they're sizeable additions I wouldn't rely on an indemnity policy - as above, they're a bodge. I have one for a couple of windows in my place. Not hard and immaterial to rectify if it ever comes to it and the vendors paid for the policy. I'd feel less comfortable about it if the end result was part of my house having to be removed, even if it was paid for!

House purchases are rarely wrinkle free (windows in mine plus lack of clarity on utilities; the owner of one house I bought once didn't even own the bloody thing legally!). But it doesn't sound like your vendor sorted things out very thoroughly at all. So what next?

Planning
The extension has planning permission but not the land owners permission. House is less than 10 years old.

Steve vRS

Original Poster:

4,870 posts

243 months

Monday 20th February 2017
quotequote all
Don't worry, my solicitor is advising me. As I am separating from my wife I have no one to bounce my thoughts off hence this thread.

The practicalities don't bother me too much but I don't see this house as a forever home and so want to avoid anything that could make it hard to sell on. Did I mention that it is next to the estate sewage pumping station as well biggrin

Steve vRS

Original Poster:

4,870 posts

243 months

Monday 20th February 2017
quotequote all
surveyor said:
I've only ever seen one like that...
Like what?