The Comments |
We are in the process of selling out villa at dorado country club el campello .we have been asked for the details of the community admin by our solicitor, we have no idea even if there is one . Is this usual ? There arnt any facilities there , only some of the later built properties shard pools , but we dont. The builder was Gama , who,our solicitor tells us went out of business .
_______________________ leicsguy
0
Like
|
If you don't have a Community of owners and don't pay any community fees (not council tax or non resident taxes) then you have no community so therefore there is no admin person to give to your Solicitor
1
Like
|
Your solicitor is being a bit lazy, they can easily find out for sure with your local town hall.
From what you say there probably isn't one, but don't let them give you the run around - this is what you pay to do.
Another failing of Spanish solicitors is failing to put anything in writing - if something goes wrong it's your word against theirs, so beware! As the vendor you're not so exposed - but it's not a bad thing to confirm anything potentially contentious to them.
_______________________ Don't argue with an idiot, he will drag you down to his level and beat you with experience.
2
Like
|
_______________________
Nigel
1
Like
|
I wonder ..if you have all the legal paperwork at hand to sell your property on ..I recently sold a villa on Camposol ..i needed the Escutura / Fin de Obra / proof that the gas / electric / water bills/ IBI had been paid and still connected / energy efficiency certificate ..I was informed that if all these documents are not present the sale would not go through..we later found out that the swimming pool did not have a license ..it cost €4,000 to have the pool inspected and a licensed issued.
1
Like
|
I had the same problem when I bought a few years ago - when I asked the solicitor in Mazarron to explain himself he unashamedly replied "you didn't tell me the property had a swimming pool". I replied telling him that I had no idea a licence was required for a pool and I was expecting good advice from him that I was paying for, but he refused to correct their error (no longer a PAL of mine!).
As a generalism, solicitors in Spain do not begin to have the professional standards you expect. To make it worse Town Hall planning departments delight in exploiting this with bureaucracy and fines. It's a disgrace, but heyho, one of the hazards of buying property in Spain.
_______________________ Don't argue with an idiot, he will drag you down to his level and beat you with experience.
1
Like
|
I think you (OP) would know if your property is part of a community (assuming you've owned it for a little while). Your lawyer, on the other hand, cannot be presumed to know anything about the property, so it is no doubt simply a standard question they ask all clients. Just tell them there is no community and therefore no administrator.
I have one simple rule I tell people when dealing with Spanish lawyers: they will (usually) answer all your questions - but they will never tell you what questions you should be asking. It's advisable therefore to gem up on the whole selling process, and do not rely on your lawyer telling you what you need to know or do.
_______________________
"Get your facts first, then you can distort them as you please"
Mark Twain
1
Like
|
The Law Society Property information form can be useful as an "aide memoire" to ask the right questions, it's mostly relevant. Invariably any agent will know nothing, but that won't stop many of them saying the words you want to hear.
Also, be aware that there is no disclosure of material fact requirement in Spain, as required in the UK these days. "Caveat emptor" hardly exists in UK conveyancing now - it most certainly does in Spain, and some!
I bought a flat a while ago and was shown round by the vendor, including the double sparking space and storage cuboard on the ground floor. But when the sale agreement was handed to me for signature the latter was not included! It's too easy to drop your guard - no proper property details, nothing in writing, the solicitors don't consider themselves as looking after your interests. In practice they don't have any such professional duty either. You're on your own.
_______________________ Don't argue with an idiot, he will drag you down to his level and beat you with experience.
1
Like
|