Pre-contract searches and enquiries Flashcards
What is the report on title? What does it identify?
Report in which solicitor reports to its clients on investigation of title, search results and replies to enquiries - will identify:
- Material facts in respect of property
- Issues and their implications
- Solutions available
Must a report on title be in writing?
Not necessarily - can be verbal (ideally face to face)
What limitations to the solicitor’s liability should the report set out?
- No opinion on commerciality of the transaction
- Unable to advise on value of property
- Not advising on physical condition of property (encourage survey)
Can the report be relied on by anyone else?
No - is addressed to and confidential to client
Will solicitor be at fault if report does not identify an issue that should have been revealed in a search but wasn’t?
No - the report is only based on reviewing title documents, planning documents and replies to enquiries
What CCS requirements does a report on title fulfil?
- Disclosure of all information material to matter of which they have knowledge
- Giving clients information in a way they can understand
Will searches only be carried out by buyer’s solicitor?
Usually, but…
- Seller’s might carry out searches if dividing land in plots to different buyers
- Lender’s might carry out searches if remortgaging with no associated purchase
What are standard and optional searches? When should either be submitted?
- Standard - always necessary
- Optional - depend on circumstances
Both submitted ASAP as they can take several weeks
Some firms will require money on account before raising searches
What are the standard searches?
Always necessary
- Local search (CON29) - enquiries of local authority
- Search of local land charges (LLC1)
- Drainage and water enquiries
- Desktop environmental search
Depending on type of title/seller:
- Land charges search (unreg land)
- Search of index map (unreg or reg land subject to mineral rights)
- Companies search
Lets
Learn
Details
Diligently
What are the optional searches?
Depend on circumstances
- CON29O (inc commons registration search)
- Highways search
- Coal mining search
- Cheshire Salt
- Tin, clay and limestone
- Phase I/Phase II survey
- Flood search
- Utility providers
- Railways – overground, underground, crossrail or HS2
- Waterways
Will searches be raised by sending letters to all appropriate institutions?
Historically this was done, but today most solicitors use National Land Information Service (NLIS); intermediary between solicitors and institutions
What does the ‘local search’ comprise?
- Optional enquiries (CON29O)
- Standard enquiries of local authority (CON29)
- Local Land Charges Search (LLC1)
First is optional remember!
What will the optional enquiries (CON29O) be relevant for?
Part of local search but optional parts
- Common land and town or village green (land designated for communal use is very restricted)
- Road proposals by private bodies
- Areas of outstanding natural beauty and national parks
- Pipelines
- Noise abatement zones
What will the standard enquiries of local authority (CON29) reveal?
Part of local search and necessary
- Planning consents, refusals and completion notices (not just granted, but also applications pending)
- Building regulations (informs whether approvals or completion certificates obtained for works carried out)
- Roads and public rights of way (footpaths) (any adoption plans)
- Environmental notices
What will the Local Land Charges Search (LLC1) reveal?
Necessary
- planning permissions that have been granted
- planning enforcement or stop notices
- article 4 directions (restricting the General Permitted Development Order)
- tree preservation orders
- smoke control orders
- financial charges such as road-making charges
- conservation areas
- listed building status
What matters will the drainage and water search check and who is the search submitted to?
Necessary
- Will check: whether foul/surface water drains to public sewer, whether property connected to mains water supply
- Sent to: relevant water company for specific area
What information is revealed by a deskptop environmental search?
Necessary
- Whether property has been historically used for potentially contaminative land uses (e.g. industrial)
- Likelihood of flooding, susceptibility to natural subsidence and industrial land uses within 250m of property
Cf local search which gives some information but only whether notices have been served(?)
Desktop = damaged by contamination
Environmental = events of flooding
Why is it important to detect contamination in a desktop environmental search?
Because an owner may be responsible for costs of cleaning up contaminated land even if not responsible for it
Not automatic
When should a chancel repair search be done and what is available to cover risk?
- For properties in parishes where there is a pre-Reformation church (susceptible to chancel repair liability)
- Indemnity insurance available to cover risk
Responsibility for repair of the church roof was shared between the church and the parishioners; very expensive if the parish church claims this.
NB the rest are depends searches
Not necessary
:)
When is a highways search needed and why not just rely on CON29?
- CON29 shows whether roads included in search are adopted highway (maintained by local authority) - usually sufficient for most residential properties
- Where there is doubt/for commercial properties - highways search is needed
What will a highways search reveal?
- Exact boundary between private land and public highway with reference to a plan
- If property abuts highway or any right of way the land has benefit of
If the results show that the property does not immediately abut the highway - will be necessary to ensure that there are appropriate rights of access
What are the 3 mining searches and when are they used?
- Coal mining - where property in area that could be subject to coal mining (whether compensation already been paid)
- Cheshire Salt search - where property falls within area that could be subject to brine subsidence (parts of Cheshire)
- Tin, clay and limestone - specifically for minerals; dependent on area
What is the difference between a deskptop environmental search and an environmental phase 1 survey? What will phase 1 survey indicate that requires an environmental phase 2 survey?
- ENV P1 = more detailed than standard deskptiop and includes site inspection
- ENV P2 = where P1 indicates risk of contamination - soil/water samples tested to indicate contamination
When should a flood search be carried out?
Where property is known to have flooded in past
More detail than deskptop environmental search
Where is a utility providers search carried out and what does it check?
Where property is a (site for) new development - checks property has benefit of utility connections (elec, gas, telecom)
When is a railways search carried out and what is the specific search?
- Where railway passes near property/is within proximity of proposed railway
- No standard search; enquiries made to Network Rail/relevant company e.g. London Underground
When is a waterways search carried out? What liability does it show?
- Where property has a waterway (river/canal) passing through or next to it
- Shows liability for maintenance of river bank/canal, rights of way for banks and tow paths, drainage and fishing rights, and owner’s liability for flooding
What searches are relevant for the title/seller? When is each used?
- Index map search (SIM)
- MapSearch
- Central Land Charge Search (K15)
- Bankruptcy search (K16)
- Companies search
When is an Index map search (SIM) required and what does it show?
- Where property unregistered or comprises more than one title (reg or unreg)
- Shows extent of registered titles and unregistered land within area search
What is a MapSearch?
Free searchable map of registered titles on LR portal
Useful reference tool - but will not guarantee result unlike SIM
When is a Central Land Charge Search (K15) carried out and against whom?
Different to local land charges register (from necessary searches)
- Carried out where property unregistered
- Carried out against full names of seller and all previous owners referred to in epitome of title
When is a bankruptcy search (K16) carried out?
Against seller if transaction not at full market value and against buyer taking out mortgage
16 - age 16 you might consider taking out a mortgage / receive a transaction not at full value (e.g. house) from parents