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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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Buying property in Spain from a private seller
puts both parties on an equal footing with regards to the protection
the laws contemplate. The transaction will be mainly governed by
the Spanish Civil provisions. Once the buyer has chosen a property,
it is recommendable he instructs a lawyer to assist in all the conveyancing
procedure.
Normal Schedule of Events
In Spain, commonly the transaction is divided
in three documents:
- Deposit document.
- Private purchase contract document.
- Completion by means of Public Deed of conveyance
signed before a Notary Public document.
Deposit Document
The nature of deposit or reservation sum contract
has been succinctly explained in the article "Buying from a
Developer". In short, most of these agreement are to be construed
as being true purchase sale-contracts, thus granting the same legal
remedies to buyer and seller as for any purchase-sale agreement.
Both parties are entitled to sue for performance and claim damages,
if any.
The deposit is normally left to the real estate
agency, which depending on what sort of agreement they have with
the vendor will legally bind the latter. We will analyse in this
section the relationship established between the purchaser and the
agency and the purchaser and the seller. The legal relationship
arising from the agency and the seller is to be analysed on an article
titled "Real Estate Agencies: how they operate." This
article will enable purchaser and seller to understand the degree
of involvement of Real Estate Agencies in the transaction and what
their position is.
The reservation sum document should describe the
identity of the vendor, the property and price. If this is the case,
a purchase-sale contract is construed when offer and acceptance
by the required parties are met, not needing the parties to draw
up the so-called private purchase contract in order to commit themselves.
The commitment has taken place, and therefore, being the offer of
the buyer and the acceptance of the seller put together, the law
does not allow any of the parties to withdraw unilaterally. However,
the lawyers of both parties will normally draw up a more extensive
document, either an option to purchase or an ¨arras¨ contract,
which have significant differences as to the effects and remedies
of the parties.
Another particularity of the reservation sum contract
is that it enables the buyer to make his offer according to his
needs and desires: for example, the buyer can insert a clause "subject
to sufficient mortgage granted", or subject to "property
sold together with furniture for the offered price." If the
vendor or the agency, as the case may be, accepts the offer, the
deal is struck.
Problems may arise where the vendor, either himself
or by a representative, accepts the offer and subsequently decides
to alter the conditions of this reservation sum on a further document.
On a normal case scenario, the buyer, in view that the vendor wants
to, for example, stipulate that the buyer will bear all the costs
arising from the deal, decides to stick to the reservation sum document
which will be governed by what the parties have agreed and in the
absence thereof, by the Spanish Civil Code. The dispute arises and
the vendor decides to withdraw and refund the deposit or instructs
the agency to refund the deposit. The buyer seeks legal advice and
finds out the law entitles him to sue for performance, putting the
seller in a very difficult position.
Conversely, a buyer may lodge with the agency
a significant amount and sign a ´contract´. On the assurance
that he has bought a property, he sells his property in the U.K.,
closes bank accounts, transfers his monies, ships his furniture
and when visiting the property his has purchased, he finds out that
the vendor has not been informed of any deposit left with the agency
nor has the slightest intention of selling the property for that
´agreed price´. He has signed nothing but an instruction
to sell slip, which is not and express mandate to sell, thus the
vendor being not the least bound by the document The multiple problems
which may arise at this stage of the deal are sufficiently serious
and are by themselves a powerful argument for employing the services
of a lawyer. This applies as much to buyers and to sellers.
Private purchase contract document
If the parties decide to convene the signing of
a further document, where new terms and condition can be agreed,
against payment of a sum which is normally 10% of the purchase price.
Once this document is signed, the reservation sum document ceases
to be valid and enforceable.
This agreement may adopt the form of an option
to purchase contract, an `arras´ contract or a new private
purchase contract.
Briefly, the option to purchase imposes obligations
only on the vendor. Against a sum of money, the seller undertakes
to hold the property for the buyer until a given date and obviously
undertakes to complete when the balance is paid. If the buyer withdraws,
the seller keeps the money. If he decides to go ahead, the vendor
has to grant Public-deed of conveyance. This contract is unilateral,
in that the vendor is the only party under any obligation. The buyer,
after signing, is not liable for defaulted payment of the balance.
Only the premium of the option is liable, which is lost to the vendor.
Conversely, the vendor is liable and can not withdraw from the deal
until it has expired. Before this date, the buyer informs the vendor
he wants to exercise the right granted by the vendor, and against
payment of the balance, the Public Deed of conveyance is signed.
The `arras` contract enables any of the parties
to withdraw from the proposed deal. The buyer loses the reservation
sum, and the vendor will have to refund twice that amount if he
withdraws. The Spanish Supreme Court has stated that in order for
this to be applicable, the document has to specificly provide for
this and mention without a cast of doubt that it is intention of
the parties.
The private purchase contract as such binds both
parties, enabling the non-defaulting party to sue for perfomance
and/or claim damages. Where the contracts previously described fall
short of the requirements to qualify as such, then deal will be
regarded as a plain private purchase contract. However, it has to
be said that these types of contract are not water-tight compartments.
Parties can draw up taylor-made contracts to suit their interests,
inserting clauses of the most varied nature. These are valid and
enforceable so long as:
- They are not deemed unlawful
- They are easily interpreted. Otherwise, an
ambiguous or cofusing clause will be interpreted by a Court of
law to the detriment of the party who created the ambiguity or
confusion.
What the buyer should check before handing over
any monies:
- Who holds the monies? The
deposit should be left with either a reputable and financially
sound agency or directly with the seller. The most secure bank
account for lodging these monies is the clients account of the
lawyer of the vendor. Although not technically an escrow account,
it is bonded inasmuch as lawyers have very restrictive rules as
to monies given to them for custody. It is recommendable to use
this procedure where the owner of the property is an offshore
company or when the buyer´s lawyer advises accordingly.
- Property: It is vital to
make sure the description of the dwelling corresponds to the one
you are buying. Read carefully the details, location, number of
floor, inside division etc. The land registry certificate might
be as clear as the air, the owner may offer you discounts and
also a bank guarantee in exchange for the monies you are lodging
with him to secure the property and indeed, many more facilities.
But in spite of all these assurances, he might be selling the
buyer another property of his own, not the one the buyer wants.
What happens then? The seller is not really defrauding, unless
the purchaser can prove it. And all the evidence supports his
innocence: private purchase contract, correspondence exchanged,
completion at the Notary Public, all these agree on the same property
details. The buyer has an unencumbered property which is, quite
simply, not the one he wanted but a cheaper one the seller wanted
to get rid of.
- Mortgages, liens, encumbrances or
any charge registered against the property: A mortgage
on the property is something normal and a buyer should not be
surprised to find one: all contracts include a clause stating
that the seller sells free from any charge, including mortgages.
But beware, since although a mortgage can be easily cancelled,
charges or liens might be registered against the property due
to court order arising from a previous procedure where the buyer
is not party. A lawyer will make sure the property is clear in
this respect.
- Date of completion: If the
buyer is raising funds, he should agree a completion date far
enough in time to enable the balance of the purchase to be in
place. It is normal for buyers to exceed this date due to banking
delays in swift transfers and clearance of drafts. Although not
recommendable, not meeting the date of completion does not automatically
amount to loss of deposits. The seller who wishes to discharge
the deal will have to prove that the buyer has deliberately delayed
and avoided payment.
- Costs: The most favourable
(for the buyer) wording of the clause regarding costs is the one
which states that the costs arising from the transaction will
be borne by the parties according to the provisions of the law.
Agreeing this, the buyer saves some money. However, it is normal
for the vendor to impose on the buyer payment of all costs. These
costs include Notary fees, Land Registry fees and the Plusvalía
Tax. (Increase in the value of the land over the years.). It is
matter to negotiate betwee the parties.
- Inventory: If the price includes
furniture or other items, run through the inventory list to make
sure it is correct according to what has been agreed.
Signing of Public Deed of Conveyance before
a Public Notary
This is the moment where the buyer becomes officially
the owner of the new property. A private purchase contract is enough
to buy a property and live in it. However, with this legal status,
ill-intentioned vendors are in a position to create the most devastating
type of fraud. Double sale of a property. He takes the monies of
the first buyer on a private purchase contract and shortly afterwards
sells on a Public Deed to a new buyer whilst the first buyer was
away. It has hapenned. The first buyer has lost his property and
his money if he cannot find the vendor. And the latter will never
be found, since he is a proffesional fraudster. This type of fraud
is possible, although fortunately quite improbable.
By becoming public and subsequently registering
the deed in the Land Registry the buyer avails himself of the full
protection the law offers. In addittion to this, lodging all monies
with the vendor´s lawyer will render the transaction totally
safe. The Public Deed also transmits possession from vendor to buyer,
unless otherwise agreed. Occasionally, the buyer allows the vendor
to stay in the property after signing. This can create more than
one headache to the new proprietor if the vendor refuses to leave
the property, because he is simply not entitled to kick him out
by using the force. After all the latter reverted possession on
the vendor.
The only recommendation to be made here is to
withhold from the purchase price an amount equivalent to the legal
costs of the eviction procedure, since more often than not the vendor
will have nothing to sequestrate in order to cover those costs.
There are many more issues sorrounding the functioning and effects
of the intervention of a Notary Public and Land Registry in a purchase
sale transaction. These are however to extense to be addressed on
a single article.
Always employ a lawyer for purchasing real estate.
For a reasonable fee you protect yourself of what is at times a
real minefield and could turn out to be the worst of nightmares.
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