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House sale.

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Jacey Flag 10 Mar 21 3.35pm Send a Private Message to Jacey Add Jacey as a friend

Buyer making many,in my view, unreasonable demands.
Outside of standard questions answered in property information forms,I have been faced with some forty additional questions including requests for photos of stopcock and meter cupboards.
All done in timely manner but today,when I felt that we were on point of exchange,buyer is now wanting a gas safety certificate when the last boiler service was only done in December and als,an electrical safety check when our new property was only built in 2018 and has a certificate completed in December 2017.
Is this reasonable??
Any comments would be appreciated.

 

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Foxy82 Flag 10 Mar 21 4.17pm Send a Private Message to Foxy82 Add Foxy82 as a friend

All sounds pretty standard these days. I moved last summer and had to provide answers to what I would deem as totally irrelevant. Such as details about the neighbour 3 houses down (completely detached from mine) and their extension, that didn't even exist!

It sounds like an arse covering excercise to me. If something arises, that your buyers solicitor didn't enquire about, the buyer would want to know why.

Good luck with the move by the way. Last summer was probably the most stressful period of my life. I certainly don't plan on moving again any time soon!

 

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jeeagles Flag 10 Mar 21 4.20pm

I know it's much easier from the outside, but I'd tell them to f*** off.

If they've started down that slope, it's likely they are working their way to gazundering you.

If you live in a fairly standard build flat, house, it's unlikely anything will go wrong with it. If there was an issue, then the whole street/block of flats would already be aware of it and the asking price would reflect that. Therefore, there's not much need for any questions. Everything you do need will be in the searches.

Sounds like they may be entering into the buy to let business if they are looking for a gas safety and electrical safety cert. If they wanted to be responsible landlords they'd already have paid to get one off their own back rather than rely on someone else to hand over a copy.

Remember its costing them money every time they ask a question through their solicitor.

If they change the goal posts, you take the pitch away.

Edited by jeeagles (10 Mar 2021 4.22pm)

 

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JRW2 Flag Dulwich 10 Mar 21 4.53pm Send a Private Message to JRW2 Add JRW2 as a friend

I would say to him, if you want certificates supplied, pay me in advance for the cost of obtaining them and I'll get them. As for photographs of the property, the correct procedure is to employ a surveyor, and I'm not going to do his work for you.

 

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Rudi Hedman Flag Caterham 10 Mar 21 5.00pm Send a Private Message to Rudi Hedman Add Rudi Hedman as a friend

Invite them round, sh&g the missus while the fella is inspecting all this stuff. Boot them out. Cancel the sale. Put up for sale again.

Tom already advised me on this

 


COYP

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PalazioVecchio Flag south pole 10 Mar 21 5.33pm Send a Private Message to PalazioVecchio Add PalazioVecchio as a friend

luckily this is a bullish market.

If this buyer is a t0sser , you can threaten to dump them for somebody more motivated.

 


Kayla did Anfield & Old Trafford

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Tom-the-eagle Flag Croydon 10 Mar 21 9.08pm

Originally posted by Rudi Hedman

Invite them round, sh&g the missus while the fella is inspecting all this stuff. Boot them out. Cancel the sale. Put up for sale again.

Tom already advised me on this

Ha ha
You’re a funny f@cker Rudi

 


"It feels much better than it ever did, much more sensitive." John Wayne Bobbit

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cryrst Flag The garden of England 11 Mar 21 6.37am Send a Private Message to cryrst Add cryrst as a friend

Originally posted by Jacey

Buyer making many,in my view, unreasonable demands.
Outside of standard questions answered in property information forms,I have been faced with some forty additional questions including requests for photos of stopcock and meter cupboards.
All done in timely manner but today,when I felt that we were on point of exchange,buyer is now wanting a gas safety certificate when the last boiler service was only done in December and als,an electrical safety check when our new property was only built in 2018 and has a certificate completed in December 2017.
Is this reasonable??
Any comments would be appreciated.

Depends how desperate you are for a sale. As jeegles said its a sellers market. Tell them the book is closed, take it or leave it.

Edited by cryrst (11 Mar 2021 6.38am)

 

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silvertop Flag Portishead 12 Mar 21 10.39am Send a Private Message to silvertop Add silvertop as a friend

Do what they ask if it costs nothing. Head down, suck it up.

Do what they ask if your solicitor advises it is normal. sadly, there are more and more "normal" hoops for a seller to jump through.

Don't do what they ask if the request is unreasonable and/or they already have the information through another source. that is the case for the gas and safety certificates.

If they dig in, threaten to put the place back on the market. You may be pleasantly surprised that it has already jumped £25k in value while your buyer was bolloxing you about.

 

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Jacey Flag 12 Mar 21 11.56am Send a Private Message to Jacey Add Jacey as a friend

Originally posted by silvertop

Do what they ask if it costs nothing. Head down, suck it up.

Do what they ask if your solicitor advises it is normal. sadly, there are more and more "normal" hoops for a seller to jump through.

Don't do what they ask if the request is unreasonable and/or they already have the information through another source. that is the case for the gas and safety certificates.

If they dig in, threaten to put the place back on the market. You may be pleasantly surprised that it has already jumped £25k in value while your buyer was bolloxing you about.

Thank you all for your various comments.
Surprisingly, buyer's solicitor told my apparent OCD buyer,that she did not need to have a further gas safety certificate completed where she is not intending to rent and I had the two year old boiler serviced only last December by a gas safe engineer.She has agreed to dispense with this requirement finally and the electrical test.
Unbelievably,she now wants photos of two manhole covers in front garden and to know what they are for!!
Will give her a few more days to exchange before I walk away from lack of progress and delay after delay,as not convinced that she is a genuine buyer,rather a serial buyer who never completes!!
How frustrating and expensive.

Update:telephoned my solicitor imposing a deadline for completion on 23/3 as a desperate shortage of removal firms as mine has a spare slot for that date but nothing else for that week.
My solicitor thought this is possible,so fingers crossed we can finally move forward.

Edited by Jacey (12 Mar 2021 9.20pm)

 

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JRW2 Flag Dulwich 12 Mar 21 12.19pm Send a Private Message to JRW2 Add JRW2 as a friend

I'm reminded of my first ever property purchase - a new-build 1-bedroom flat. It was one in a block of six, and there was a small attached outbuilding where our refuse bins were kept, which was clearly marked "Bins" on the plans. Just as I was expecting to receive a formal mortgage offer the lender's legal people wrote to my solicitor asking where bins would be kept. He replied, "Where it says Bins", and the mortgage was granted. Not very relevant to this post, but I still smile about it.

 

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The Dolphin Flag 12 Mar 21 12.48pm Send a Private Message to The Dolphin Add The Dolphin as a friend

If you want the sale just do it - as other posters have said.
However - tell your buyer that if she does not exchange by - pick a date - that the sale is off and that you will instruct your Solicitor to withdraw the contract.
Be prepared to own that statement though.

 

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