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Back to the procedures, after receiving the draft contract
from the ‘seller’s’ solicitor, the ‘buyer’s’
conveyancer will send a long list of printed preliminary enquiries
in return covering virtually everything that needs to be known about
the property, including insurance, guarantees, disputes, any unusual
charges and, if not already agreed, whether the seller intends to
remove those fixtures, fittings, plants, aerial, burglar alarm, telephone,
etc.
He will also send off an official search, with a printed
list of further enquiries, to the local authority to see, for example,
if the property is subject to any local land charge or any adverse
entries; how drainage is connected, what building or other development
has been granted, proposed roads, compulsory purchase or mining activities
past, present or future.
When HIPs come into force most of this information plus
some new items) will be included in the Package and available for
inspection at the outset with the idea of saving significant time.
Once all these enquiries and searches are complete and
satisfactory, the ‘buyers’ conveyancer will ensure that
financial arrangements, such as the mortgage offer, are in place so
that the purchase price can be paid on completion, with the date proposed
inserted in the draft contract. At this stage, the deposit, normally
10% of the purchase price, is forwarded to the ‘sellers’
solicitor. If the mortgage advance is more than 90%, the balance is
normally sent. The buyer signs the contract which is sent with the
deposit.
The ‘sellers’ solicitor will ensure that
his client is ready to be committed. If so, a contract in identical
terms is signed and exchanged with the buyer. Both parties are now
legally bound and neither can back out, without consent of the other,
as that would be a breach of contract.
If the seller or buyer has another property to buy or
sell in conjunction the conveyancers will normally ensure that all
the properties in the chain of transactions exchange contracts simultaneously.
The ‘buyers’ conveyancer will make a few
final checks to ensure that there is no undisclosed mortgage and the
seller is not bankrupt, for example before preparing a Transfer Deed
or Conveyance. Normally, prior to completion, the buyer will receive
a statement of account from his conveyancer setting out the financial
position, taking into account any pre-contract deposit paid to the
estate agent and the deposit paid on exchange. On the day agreed for
completion, the balance of the purchase price is paid to the ‘sellers’
solicitor, normally electronically. The keys will then be released
to the buyer who becomes liable for the Council Tax and all other
outgoings from that date.
Even with the best preparation, delays can occasionally
occur or hidden liability surface after completion though this is
increasingly rare.
Selling normally entails another purchase at the same
time. Conversely, your buyer, unless a first time buyer, will also
be trying to sell and cannot normally exchange contracts until his
own property has been sold to provide the purchase money. With the
additional delays in searches and enquiries, being involved in a chain
of transactions effectively means you can only move at the speed of
the slowest link in the chain. This is where we can assist as we can
talk to other agents and other solicitors in the chain and keep you
properly advised over what is happening. We will do everything we
can to smooth out the delays that inevitably occur. Hopefully your
solicitor/conveyancer will also do their best to keep you informed
of progress. But always ask them the reason for delay; they are there
to help and keep you fully informed.
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