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Check before you buy - Private Contracts

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Buying  a house

The private contract
When buying a house, it is frequent that, before the granting of the public deed, a private contract is signed between the seller and the buyer.  This contract is not obligatory, but in those cases when the seller is a Developer, this step is taken in the most of the cases. There is the moment to check that a fair, balance contract, without abusive clauses is being signed.
Take into account that Law consider the Private Contract as perfectly valid way to make a transaction, which means that once  you sign a private contract, you will be legally obligued regarding the full content of the document and you will have to fulfil every agreement  contained thereby, provided of course, they are not against the Law. But the party won’t get exempted from the fulfilment of the contract by alleging that what is was agreed, is not of interest anymore.
Of course every abusive clause, as it against Law is null and void and if the abusive clause is regarding one of the essential features of the contract, the whole contract can be declared null and void by  a Judge, with the correspondent devolution of money deposited, legal interests and compensation.
Therefore it is very important to have good advice before signing a document like this. A good lawyer can direct you to balanced and fair clauses in the private contract, especially in the field of real estate where developers usually have a status of superiority.  You must understand all you are signing and do not sign on anything you are not sure enough.
Hereby some important aspects of the sales private contract:
1) If you don’t master Spanish sufficiently, ask the developer or agent to give to you an English version of the contract.
2) Date and place of contract.
3)   Check who is signing on behalf of the selling party: When the seller is a developer, the signer usually is an administrator or a legal representative, which is not problematic, but the details of the deed where he was nominated need to be mentioned in the contract and he needs to show the deed itself to you. The contract will contain the CIF (taxes identification number of the company) and domicile. That will be the valid domicile for notices regarding the contract if no other is mentioned to these effects.  
If the transaction is between two individual parties, the document must be signed by all the owners, themselves or through sufficient proxies.  If a house is part of the marital community, the document must be signed by both husband and wife; they both will have to sign too if even not being part of the marital community (being an exclusive good of one of them). The most practical and useful thing is to act the Land Registry for an updated “Nota Simple” of the property to check the current owners and any speciality involved.
 If the seller gives power of attorney to another person to sign the private contract, the authorised person will have to present the authorised notary copy, it means, the original document signed by the Notary, not just a photocopy, an the power of attorney will grant enough power for the sale, so that it is very important to check, by reading the power of attorney deed, that the authorised person can sign the sale (these mentions are among the faculties stated in the deed). If the seller are the heirs of the owner, it is important to make sure that they have got all the dully Inheritance documents in order and they are the only heirs who hold rights on the property. Again, better to have the most updated “Nota Simple” of the house from the Land Registry. There is an online, English versioned service at www.registradores.org (9, 01 € a nota simple)-
4) If you are buying off plan, the deed must contain the details of the deed for   ownership over the plot, land reference ( referencia catastral) new work declaration and horizontal division  deeds. If the horizontal division has been made, your house must be described in the deed, with its borders, and land registry information.
5) Check the Work License obtained from the Local Town and ask for a copy of that.
6) Charges on the house:  It is very important to verify which charges exist on the house, and check out if it is free of charges, loans and encumbrances.  In order to check that out, again, the most useful instrument is a Nota Simple http://www.costaluzlawyers.es/eng/?p=31 from the Land Registry Very often, a mortgage will be found, in these cases, the buyer will have to subrogate that mortgage, which means that he will have to accept it and become the debtor of the remaining debt against the Bank which has granted the mortgage.  It is necessary then to know on interests’ rates, recovery time, and commissions and of course the amount still owed. It will be convenient to ask in the bank as the Nota simple doesn’t reflect all these details.
7) Verification that the house is not VPO ( state subsidized house). Can be checked mentioned in the Nota Simple, New Work deed or  horizontal division deed.
8) Building stage of the house.
9) Name and data of both architect and project.
10) Name and identification data of the builder.
11)  Community of owners´ shares. When buying off plan, the community charges won´t be determined Hill first or second meeting of the community of owners. Horizontal division deeds  contain the precise share or percentage of ownership of your apartment within the whole building. The charges ( monthly instalments) will be determined according to this proportion.  If it is a resale house , you need to have information on the situation of the house regarding payments to the Community. Ask it to the Property Manager or the President, get  copies of the Statutes or internal rules of the building too.
 12) Price, deposit and payment method:  The contract will specify the price of the house and the payment method. Specifying amounts corresponding to VAT too.  There are certain kind of houses which have official value, the Treasure Department of the Autonomous Community has this information.
13) Mention to the specific Bank account where your Money will be deposited, and reception of Aval Bancario  ( Bank Guarantee) or Insurance Policy, at the moment of the signing of the contract at no cost to the buyer. It isa legal obligation Ander Law 57/68. If usually has an expiration date. Developer needs to renew it and extend the deadlines if compeltion date arrives, work is not finished and you decide to grant an extensión. Free.
14) Completion date: Very important to have determined, clear completion date, at least the quarter and the year when this will be finished.  If any extensions are agreed, the contrat needs to clearly stablish the terms of these extensions which needs to be always  justified by the Developer, communicated to the buyer and formally accepted by him. Also pay attention not to sign indefinide extension clauses. Anyhow, if that were signed, it could be invoked as null and void as abusive ( against the most essential bilateral carácter of contract, producing a lacking of object in the contract which turns it as null and void).
If the house is finished beforehand, the buyer will have the right to decide if paying all the due amounts and complete  then or at the date initially agreed in the contract.  Therefore, is not obligued to complete in anticipation.
15)  Related expenses:  Need to be mentioned and how, who will pay them:   
-  Plusvalía ( a tax oer the value rise of the property from one to the next transmisión)
- Notary Deed.
- Registration in Land Registry.
- Transfer taxes
If nothing is specifically mentioned or if it is agreed that expenses will be paid “ according to Law” , the seller will pay Plusvalía, and the most of the Notary Deed and the buyer will pay the copies of the Notray deeds, the registration of the Property in the Land Registry and the trasnfer tax.
It is against consumer law, abusive, to have the buyer paying the Plusvalía., so even agreed in the contract, will be considered as a  non existent agreement, null and void .
It is also against Law to have the buyer paying titling expenses which corresponds to the Developer:  new work declaration deed, horizontal division deed and mortgage cancellation deed.

16)   Notary choosing: The buyer has  a right to free election of Notary for the signing of the future, required parchase deed.
17)  The private contract is sufficient to link the two parties over the object according to what is agreed in the contract clauses but it is not sufficient in order to register the property in the Land Registry or to ask for a mortage. You need a public deed dor these two.
I will write on Notary deeds in a future article.

18) Cancellation clauses and penalties for delay ( equilibrium) http://www.costaluzlawyers.es/eng/?p=25. THe contract needs to have equivalent penalty clauses for delays ( to both parties) which need to be agreed by the contracting parties and not imposed by any of them. It also needs to put the parties in balanced conditions for the cancellation of the contrat and stablish equivalent compesation in these cases.  

19) Transmission before completion. Even when developers usually agree on that at a comission rate ( around 2-3 % of the price with a minimum fee), this possibility is getting  more and more difficult due to new taxes regulations which try to stop the avoidance of transfer taxes in these cases.

20) Authorization, name an price of management services ( gestoria) to have the house duly registered and taxes duly paid.

21) Agreement on jurisiction  or  submission to arbitration.
 


 




 




 
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