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Index of Articles:
Civil Law
- Electronic Signature
- Right to Claim:
A Matter of Time
Inheritance Law
- Applicable Inheritance
Law to Estate Located in Spain
- Spanish Inheritance
Tax: How much is it?
Property Law
- Buying a Property
in Spain? 10 Reasons to Hire a Lawyer
- Taxes when Selling
Spanish Property
- How do Unpaid
Bills and Taxes on a Property affect the New Owner
- Independent legal
advice
- Transfer Tax of
Public Auction Purchases
- Buying Property
in Spain: An Overview
- Buying Property
from a Private Seller
- Making an Offer
and Issues Relating to Price
- Tips on Choosing
the Property
- Yearly Taxes and
Fees on Property Ownership
- Purchasing a Property
from a Developer
- Real Estate Agencies:
A Legal Perspective
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It is interesting to see that in most of the publications
currently circulating in the main tourist resorts in Spain, especially
in those directed to the foreign investors in Spanish property,
there is certainly no shortage of legal advice and professionals
being offered.
This legal advice, albeit occasionally overwhelming
(i.e. Sur in English special property section), serves as a reminder
to the investor of the need of engaging a solicitor prior to embarking
on the purchase of property, and is not superfluous. However, on
reading the magazines edited by real estate companies, we see that
they normally publicise lawyers (our colleages) which then appear
to be the ones who are recommended to buyers and can more often
than not be seen flying abroad with the sales team on property exhibition
trips, to help sales people close as many deals as possible by providing
legal assurances.
These ´company´ or ´corporate´
lawyers, which ocassionally are also seen onboard some real estate
companies´ sail boats as part of the trained crew, come short
of what should be regarded as independent legal advice when dealing
with those clients who have been recommended by the real estate
company with whom they sail, race and fly.
I would like to stress that this article is no
crusade against some of my respected colleages of the legal profession.
But it is important to call apples to apples and pears to pears,
in order to avoid confusion and misunderstandings.
In my opinion, legal advice given by lawyers regularly
recommended cannot be considered as truly independent, for the following
reasons:
- The buyer, the seller and the agent have relationships
of different nature amongst them. The buyer, although he does
not normally sign any legally binding agreement with the agent,
the latter acting on his own behalf, does commit to the purchase
a deposit which is lodged with the agent until the vendor accepts
the offer. The regularly recommended lawyer is obviously not going
to conduct any search on the soundness of the real estate agent
with whom they fly, sail and race.
- The lawyer, given his regular recommendation
by the agent, is somewhat inclined to assist the agent in the
obtention of the commission in addition to providing a service
to his client. This is a logical conclusion, when is known to
us that some of these lawyers take on personnel to deal exclusively
with the clients provided by the agent and needs the client influx
to cover the costs: it is therefore vital to please the business
provider.
- A lawyer regularly recommended by the agent,
out of dire logic, in the event of a foreseeable problematic conclusion
of the sale, will not advise his client-buyer on pulling out from
the purchase where the vendor does not comply with his obligations.
For some agents, a commission on a sale can represent many months
of work and any legal advice not directed to satisfactorily concluding
the sale is not acceptable.
This is often made clear in heated telephone conversations
where the regularly recommended lawyer fruitlessly tries to explain
the agent what is the most favourable legal move for his client
(but seemingly not for the agent). This puts the regularly recommended
lawyer under enourmous pressure.
- Very rarely (I hope), legal representatives
of some kind regularly recommended by some real estate agents
are instructed to deal with their clients in a particular manner:
the vendor of the property who sells through the agent is offered
a net price which the agent says he can obtain. When a buyer comes
along, the asking price he is given is way above what the vendor
is getting, and far more than a normal intermediation commission.
The buyer does not know where his money is going, and the vendor
is similarly oblivious of the real offered purchase price.
But how does the agent manage to avoid both parties
from meeting and discovering this gross malpractice? Simple: they
recommend the purchaser a legal representative of some kind who
will complete the deal on his behalf either with a power of attorney
or preferably with a mandate, verbal or written, (in Spanish notarial
practice it is considered to be verbal), concealing from the vendor
the real price the buyer is paying and diverting a good portion
of it to the agent. A few days later, the buyer arrives in Spain
to ratify the acts of his legal representative of some kind, with
the result that he never meets the vendor and never gets to know
the moneys that have been sucked by the agent.
True independence is not achived in these cases,
although this by no means signifies that all deals are doomed when
the agents recommends his lawyer friend. Most of them will almost
certainly act honourably with their clients, and most of the introductions
will create solid client-lawyer relationships to endure the test
of time. But from the agent´s point of view it would be honest
to advise the client-purchaser that the designation of a regurlarly
recommended legal representative is intended to serve the agent´s
purpose more than the purchaser´s.
I would like to finish this article mentioning
a particularly inmoral and almost illegal form of recommended legal
representation. It refers to big UK companies operating in the Alicante
area who organise inspection flights for prospective purchasers
to view pre-designated new developments. Within the package inclusive
of accomodation, flights, scheduled viewings and other services,
these big companies have a special discounted offer on a legal representation
service. Within the legal package one cannot detect a trace of ´independent´
advice.
Not only does this lawyer accept that large percentages
of the purchase price are paid to the UK company, sometimes through
UK accounts, rather than to the Spain-based developer but is also
unconcerned on whether the developer guarantees the downpayments.
If the client insists on having all payments guaranteed, as the
law provides, they will try to charge the buyer for arranging the
guarantees which by law are totally free from cost for the buyer
and on account of the developer. The supplement charge will be of
1% of the guaranteed amount, totally outrageous.
Paying for such a legal representative is not
advisable, and the consequences of using one definitely counterproductive.
All of the above is based on experiences of first
time property purchasers in different areas in Spain.
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