Property formative Flashcards
You act for a company on the purchase of a commercial property. Contracts were exchanged last Friday with completion to take place next Friday. The contract incorporates the Standard Commercial Property Conditions (Third Edition) (‘SCPC’)
The company’s financial director calls you to say that the storage area to the rear of the property was destroyed by fire last night, and to ask who is responsible for the cost of repairing the damage.
Which one of the following options is the best advice to give to the financial director?
Select one alternative:
* The company will have to pay for the damage because the buyer bears the risk between exchange of contracts and completion.
* The seller will have to pay for the damage because it bears the risk between exchange of contracts and completion.
* The seller will have to claim on its insurance which it has to maintain until completion.
* The company and the seller will have to share the cost of repairing the damage as the law is silent as to who bears the risk.
* The company will have to claim on its insurance once it buys an insurance policy which starts on completion
The company will have to pay for the damage because the buyer bears the risk between exchange of contracts and completion.
Correct. Pursuant to the SCPCs the risk of the property passes to the buyer from the date of the contact, which is exchange. The buyer should have put in place insurance from exchange of contacts. The seller is no longer responsible for the property from exchange. The cost of repair is not shared between the parties, it will be at the buyer’s cost. The seller does not have to maintain its insurance of the property until completion. The buyer’s insurance policy should have been in place from exchange (not completion).
You are acting for Company A in the purchase of an unregistered freehold property from Mr B and Ms C. Company A is funding the purchase with a loan from X Bank plc. You are not acting for X Bank plc. Contracts were exchanged 21 days ago and completion will take place in 7 days.
Which one of the following searches would it be best for you to carry out before completion?
Select one alternative:
* An OS1 search in favour of Company A.
* An OS1 search in favour of X Bank plc.
* A Central Land Charges Search on Form K15 against Mr B and Ms C.
* A Central Land Charges Search on Form K15 against Company A.
* A bankruptcy search on Form K16 against Mr B and Ms C .
- A Central Land Charges Search on Form K15 against Mr B and Ms C.
Correct. While the other options might sound plausible they are each incorrect. On a purchase of unregistered land, the transfer to the buyer must complete within the 15 working day ‘protection period’ in the Central Land Charges Search made against the name of the current seller. The 15 working day protection period in any pre-exchange Central Land Charges Search on K15 made against the current seller would have expired and therefore the search needs to be renewed before completion.
The seller has replied to question 4.1 of the Law Society Property Information Form to say that a front extension was built to the house five years ago. From the estate agent’s photo, it is clear that the extension is visible from the road.
The seller has replied to question 4.2 of the same form to say that no planning permission or building regulations approvals were required.
How should you advise your client?
Select one alternative:
* The seller should be asked to obtain and provide a Regularisation Certificate in respect of the extension works before completion.
* The buyer should not be concerned as the relevant enforcement periods for lack of local authority approvals have expired.
* The buyer may rely on the seller’s reply 4.2 in which the seller confirms that no approvals were required.
* The seller should obtain indemnity insurance in respect of the lack of planning permission and building regulations approval before completion.
* The seller should be asked to provide indemnity insurance in respect of the lack of building regulations approval before completion.
- The seller should be asked to obtain and provide a Regularisation Certificate in respect of the extension works before completion.
Correct. This is the best option. There is no need to take any action regarding planning permission, as the extension works were completed more than four years ago, and were not concealed. They are immune from enforcement action. However, there is no time limit on the local authority applying for an injunction against a breach of building regulations. Moreover, if the extension is not compliant with building regulations, it may be unsafe. An indemnity insurance policy will cover the financial loss caused by enforcement action, but will not cover liability for injury or death caused by unsafe building work. If the local authority inspects the work and provides the regularisation certificate, this will eliminate the risk of enforcement action and confirm that the work is safe.
You act for the buyer of a registered commercial property. The buyer intends to undertake a significant extension to the property following completion.
The seller told the buyer during a viewing of the property that an application for planning permission to build a similar extension was refused by the local authority two years ago.
Which search / enquiry would you undertake to confirm the position?
Select one alternative:
* The local land charges search (LLC1)
* Land Charges Department search
* The CON29O
* Seller’s replies to CPSEs
* A local authority search (CON29)
A local authority search (CON29)
This is correct. The CON29 search shows all applications for planning permissions granted, issued, refused or pending. The LLC1 search will only show planning permissions that have been granted.
You are acting for the buyers of a property. The seller is Mark Arthur. The seller’s solicitor tells you that Philip Arthur recently died. You review the official copies, which contain the following entry:
Proprietor(s): PHILIP ARTHUR and MARK ARTHUR of 35 Yewdale Road, Leeds, LS3 8QP
RESTRICTION: no disposition by a sole proprietor of the registered estate (except a trust corporation) under which capital money arises is to be registered unless authorised by an order of the court.
Which one of the following statements best explains what you need to do in respect of this entry in the Proprietorship Register?
Select one alternative:
* You need to ensure another trustee is appointed to pay the purchase money to, so the restriction will not apply.
* You do not need to do anything, the right of survivorship will apply so Mark Arthur can sell as a sole proprietor.
* You need to see a certified copy of the death certificate and then Mark Arthur can sell as a sole proprietor.
* You do not need to do anything as Philip Arthur has died so the restriction is no longer relevant.
* You do not need to do anything, this is for the seller’s solicitors to deal with.
You need to ensure another trustee is appointed to pay the purchase money to, so the restriction will not apply.
This is correct. This restriction tells us Mark and Philip are beneficial tenants in common and prevents a sale by a sole owner. This means a sale by Mark alone is not permitted and would not be registered by the Land Registry. A second trustee needs to be appointed in order to comply with the restriction. This will overreach Philip’s beneficial interest, which will have passed under his estate because the right of survivorship will not have applied on his death.
You act for a buyer on the sale of an unregistered freehold property. You have undertaken a review of the title deeds to the property and note that the property benefits from a right of way granted by deed over neighbouring land.
Which one of the following statements best explains the next step you should take?
Select one alternative:
* You will need to undertake a search of the central land charges register to check whether the right of way has been registered as a land charge.
* You will need to undertake a SIM search to check whether or not the neighbouring land is registered.
* You will need to undertake a highways search to ensure the right of way has been adopted.
* You will need to apply to the Land Registry for a caution against first registration against the neighbouring land.
* You will need to agree a deed of variation with the owner of the neighbouring land to ensure the right of way is appropriate for your client’s needs.
- You will need to undertake a SIM search to check whether or not the neighbouring land is registered.
Correct. A SIM search will inform you whether or not the neighbouring land is registered. This is important as this will determine whether or not the easement will bind it. If the neighbouring land is unregistered then the easement will continue to bind the neighbouring land whilst it remains unregistered. If the neighbouring land is registered, however, the easement needs to have been registered on the charges register of the neighbouring land’s title in order for it to bind its current owners.
The bank makes only exempt supplies for VAT purposes in the course of its business.
Which one of the following most accurately sets out the position with regards to any VAT chargeable in respect of the sale?
Select one alternative:
* The sale will be subject to VAT at 20% which the bank can recover by offsetting it against the 0% VAT chargeable on the goods and services it supplies, leading to a payment by HMRC to the bank.
* The sale will be subject to VAT at 20% which will be recoverable by the bank.
* The sale will not be subject to VAT.
* The sale will be subject to VAT at 0%.
* The sale will be subject to VAT at 20% which will be irrecoverable by the bank.
The sale will be subject to VAT at 20% which will be irrecoverable by the bank.
Correct. The option to tax a commercial building made by a VAT registered business seller means VAT is chargeable on the sale at 20%. The bank only makes exempt supplies (VAT is not chargeable on the goods and services it supplies) so the bank cannot recover the VAT it paid (input VAT) by offsetting it against output VAT it charges on goods and services it supplies since the bank cannot charge output VAT.
The registered title to a property contains a restrictive covenant ‘not to use the property for any purpose other than as a single private dwelling house.’ The property is currently used as a private residence.
The buyer, who is a doctor, wishes to use the property as a surgery after completion.
Which one of the following options is the best advice to give to the buyer?
Select one alternative:
* Use of the property as a doctor’s surgery would be a future breach of the restrictive covenant. An application to the Upper Tribunal (Lands Chamber) is not possible, as they will not assist a person who intends to commit a future breach of a restrictive covenant.
* Provided that the buyer obtains planning permission for the surgery, this will put the Person with Benefit on notice, and they cannot then object to the breach if they do not object within the planning permission consultation stage.
* Use of the property as a doctor’s surgery would be a future breach of the restrictive covenant and the seller should pay for any restrictive covenant insurance policy.
* Use of the property as a doctor’s surgery is not a breach of the covenant as long as the doctor lives in the house and the surgery is an ancillary use.
* Use of the property as a doctor’s surgery would be a future breach of the restrictive covenant and, as a first option, the buyer should try to obtain (at the buyer’s cost) a restrictive covenant insurance policy.
Use of the property as a doctor’s surgery would be a future breach of the restrictive covenant and, as a first option, the buyer should try to obtain (at the buyer’s cost) a restrictive covenant insurance policy.
Correct. Where there will be a future breach of the restrictive covenant on the part of the buyer, the first remedy that the buyer should consider is a restrictive covenant indemnity policy which the buyer should pay the cost of. Please refer back to your materials relating to the different types of covenants and the remedies that are available if they are breached depending on whether the breach was a past breach by the seller or will be a future breach by the buyer.
You are acting for a company on the purchase of a registered property for £550,000. A bank is providing the company with a mortgage of £300,000 and is taking a first ranking fixed charge over the property.
Which one of the following best describes the post-completion steps you would take to register the bank’s charge?
Select one alternative:
* Register the charge at Companies House within 21 working days of the creation of the charge and at the Land Registry within two months of the creation of the charge.
* Register the charge at the Land Registry within 21 working days of the creation of charge, and tick the MR01 box on the AP1 for the Land Registry to attend to registration at Companies House.
* Register the charge at Companies House within 21 working days beginning the day after the creation of the charge and at the Land Registry within 30 days of the OS1 search.
* Register the charge at Companies House within 21 days of the creation of the charge, and at the Land Registry within two months of the creation of the charge.
* Register the charge at Companies House within 21 days beginning the day after the creation of the charge, and at the Land Registry within 30 working days of the OS1 search.
Register the charge at Companies House within 21 days beginning the day after the creation of the charge, and at the Land Registry within 30 working days of the OS1 search.
Correct. This shows the correct timescale for both Companies House and the Land Registry.
A solicitor acts for the buyer of a commercial property. The buyer instructs the solicitor that the seller and the buyer have agreed between them that the seller will carry out some repairs to the roof before the completion date.
Which one of the following best represents the steps that the buyer’s solicitor should now take in connection with the contract?
Select one alternative:
* A special condition would not be required, as the seller is obliged to transfer the property in good repair.
* There is no need for a special condition as the verbal agreement of the seller is sufficient.
* The buyer’s solicitor should draft a special condition in the contract specifying that the seller must carry out the repairs to the roof of the property before the completion date to the reasonable satisfaction of the buyer.
* The special condition is not required as the SCPC confirms that the property is sold in the state it is in at the date of the agreement between the parties.
* The buyer’s solicitor should draft a special condition in the contract specifying that the seller must carry out the repairs to the roof.
- The buyer’s solicitor should draft a special condition in the contract specifying that the seller must carry out the repairs to the roof of the property before the completion date to the reasonable satisfaction of the buyer.
This is correct. Special conditions are required to deal with specific matters agreed between the parties. Caveat emptor would mean that in the absence of a special condition, the responsibility for the repairs would fall to the buyer. s2 Law of Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1989 states that all the terms agreed between the parties must be incorporated in the contract, so the seller’s promise to repair the roof would not be binding without being in the contract.
A restaurant operator is expanding its business and acquires the freehold of a registered property which is currently used as a shop. The restaurant operator will be changing the use of the property from a shop to a restaurant (both uses are within class E) and will also be carrying out significant internal building works.
Which one of the following best sets out the necessary consents needed for the restaurant operator’s plans?
Select one alternative:
* Neither planning permissions nor building regulations approvals are required for the planned change of use and works.
* Planning permission is not required for the change of use but it is required for the internal building works. Building regulations approvals are also required for the internal building works.
* No planning permissions will be needed although building regulations approvals for the works will be required.
* Planning permission is required for both the change of use (unless it falls within ‘permitted development’ under the GPDO) and the internal building works. Building regulations approvals are not required.
* Planning permission is required for the change of use although not for the internal building works. Building regulations approval is not required either.
- No planning permissions will be needed although building regulations approvals for the works will be required.
Correct. Under s55(2) TCPA 1990 the internal building works do not constitute development and so planning permission is not required for them. The change of use of the property, from a shop to a restaurant, where both uses are within the same use class is not a material change of use and so does not constitute development, so planning permission is not required for the change of use. Building regulations approvals are required for works carried out and cover safety matters such as structural integrity. They are a separate consent from the planning permissions.
You act for a company who is selling its freehold offices (‘Seller’). Contracts have been exchanged for completion today at 2 pm. The contract incorporates the Standard Commercial Property Conditions (Third Edition – 2018 Revision) without any amendments and completion.
You have just been informed that the buyer can no longer complete today as planned but can complete before 2 pm a week from today.
Which one of the following best describes the advice you would give to the Seller regarding obtaining compensation for the delay?
Select one alternative:
* The Seller can claim compensation from the buyer for each day of delay including both today and the day completion finally takes place or is deemed to take place.
* The Seller can claim compensation from the buyer for each day of delay and can serve a notice to complete by e-mail in advance of 2pm today.
* The Seller can claim compensation and can serve a notice to complete by email on the buyer today in advance of 2pm. The buyer will then have 10 working days, including today, to complete.
* In addition to receiving compensation, the Seller may rescind the contract but is obliged to repay the deposit with accrued interest to the buyer.
* The Seller can claim compensation and can serve a notice to complete by email on the buyer today after 2pm. The buyer will then have 10 working days, excluding today, to complete.
The Seller can claim compensation and can serve a notice to complete by email on the buyer today after 2pm. The buyer will then have 10 working days, excluding today, to complete
Correct. This answer reflects the contractual terms prescribed by the SCPC. The ten working day period, given to the defaulting party to complete, starts to run the day after the notice to complete has been deemed served. The notice to complete can be served at any time on the day of completion once the time for completion has passed. The time for completion is 2pm under the SCPC. The compensation is payable for every day of delay so that would include today (the day the buyer was supposed to complete) but would not include the day completion takes place, on these facts, as the buyer will be completing before 2pm. Unless 2pm has passed on the day the buyer completes, the buyer will not have been ‘late’ on that day. Finally, the Seller cannot both claim compensation under the SCPCs and also rescind the contract, they can only do one or the other.
You act for a client who intends to buy a registered freehold in the countryside. The client has asked you to check whether a public footpath crosses the property.
Where would you normally expect to find the answer?
Select one alternative:
* The commons registration search result
* The property register of the official copies
* The replies to standard enquiries of the local authority
* The central land charges search result
* Search of the index map result
The replies to standard enquiries of the local authority
Correct. There is a question to the local authority at enquiry 2.2 asking if there are any public right of ways (which would include footpaths) that abut or cross the property. While the other answer options might sound plausible, they are each incorrect.
You are acting for a buyer on its purchase of a registered freehold commercial property. You exchanged contracts last week and are now preparing for completion which is due to take place in 14 days’ time. The property is subject to a standard commercial mortgage in favour of a clearing bank (the Bank).
Which of the following statements best explains an appropriate next step for you to take in preparation for completion?
Select one alternative:
* Obtain a redemption figure from the Bank.
* Undertake a Central Land Charge search using form K15 to obtain a protection period.
* Undertake a Land Registry priority search using Form OS1.
* Ensure that the seller has provided replies to the CPSE enquiries and that all issues discovered in the replies have been dealt with.
* Provide an undertaking to the seller’s solicitor to transfer the deposit monies.
- Undertake a Land Registry priority search using Form OS1.
This is correct. The buyer’s solicitor would need to do this to ensure the buyer benefits from a priority period. The OS1 freezes the register given the buyer a priority period to register the transfer. It also reveals if any changes have been made to the register since the title was investigated pre-exchange.
A solicitor acts for the buyer of a commercial property which is situated by a river. The property includes 5 acres of the surrounding open agricultural land.
The solicitor has already received or requested: replies to CPSE, local authority search, drainage and water search, and index map search.
Which other searches should the solicitor carry out?
Select one alternative:
* Desktop environmental search, EA Phase 1 Audit, chancel repair search, highways search, brine subsidence search, waterways search and commons registration.
* Chancel repair search, highways search, waterways search and commons registration search.
* Desktop environmental search, chancel repair search, highways search, waterways search and commons registration search.
* Desktop environmental search, index map search, chancel repair search, highways search, waterways search.
* Desktop environmental search, chancel repair search, highways search and commons registration search.
- Desktop environmental search, chancel repair search, highways search, waterways search and commons registration search.