Quizzes & Puzzles21 mins ago
Restrictive Covenant on Land
I am about to demolish my house and build a semi -detached house in the same position. I have found out there is a covenant on the land saying only 1 house can be built. This stems from 1964 when my house was built and the person who put this on has died and his large house has been pulled down and a small development is in its place. Do the people in this development still have the right to prevent me building?
Please can someone help me with this problem
Please can someone help me with this problem
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.This should have been looked into when you purchased the property and i would suggest that you check your report on title and other docs received such as copies of the title register which may provide more detail.
There are possible ways round the situation but you could do with the help of a legal advisor.
Indemnity insurance may be put in place for a one off premium but it is not the solution it can be made out to be. If it is suggested look into the policy wording and obtain clarification from your advisors before you rely on this.
It could be that some kind of agreement could be reached and a deed of release subject to other conditions and more than likely for a fee of the person with the benefit could be traced. Do note though that approaching anyone would more than likely void any indemnity policy.
Did the sols who acted on your the purchase know your intentions? If so and they didn't advise you properly there may be a claim there but if they didn't and they advised you of it's existence probably not.
Best to see a legal advisor for proper advice on how to deal with this. i'd try a firm with very experienced conveyancers or better still a commercial property lawyer who deals with development work as they will probably be more experienced in this area than a day to day conveyancer.
Good luck!
There are possible ways round the situation but you could do with the help of a legal advisor.
Indemnity insurance may be put in place for a one off premium but it is not the solution it can be made out to be. If it is suggested look into the policy wording and obtain clarification from your advisors before you rely on this.
It could be that some kind of agreement could be reached and a deed of release subject to other conditions and more than likely for a fee of the person with the benefit could be traced. Do note though that approaching anyone would more than likely void any indemnity policy.
Did the sols who acted on your the purchase know your intentions? If so and they didn't advise you properly there may be a claim there but if they didn't and they advised you of it's existence probably not.
Best to see a legal advisor for proper advice on how to deal with this. i'd try a firm with very experienced conveyancers or better still a commercial property lawyer who deals with development work as they will probably be more experienced in this area than a day to day conveyancer.
Good luck!