Leaseholder - licence to do alterations?
Leaseholder - licence to do alterations?
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Discussion

Rags

Original Poster:

3,674 posts

259 months

Tuesday 3rd August 2010
quotequote all
Morning,

I own a flat and am a leaseholder.

As you would expect, I am required to obtain permission prior to carrying out any alterations that affect the fabric the flat or layout of the flat.

Now, the freeholders require me to obtain a licence along with the plans from a structural engineer - no problem.

So, this licence then gets created and I am asked to pay over £600 in solictors fees - bear in mind this job is to knock down a two metre long non supporting wall and replace it with a stud wall structure and a set of double doors.

Am I getting shafted? or is this legitimate. My view is its an old boys set up and the £600+ to create a 'licence' is money for old rope.

Extortion!

davidjpowell

18,596 posts

207 months

Tuesday 3rd August 2010
quotequote all
Be glad it's not commercial premises. I've seen bills in much bigger magnitude.

Ask the solicitor to justify it. He will, and you will have to suck it up sadly.

Rags

Original Poster:

3,674 posts

259 months

Tuesday 3rd August 2010
quotequote all
davidjpowell said:
Be glad it's not commercial premises. I've seen bills in much bigger magnitude.

Ask the solicitor to justify it. He will, and you will have to suck it up sadly.
His justification is 'thats what our standard fees are;.

The thing is, I have had to supply drawings at my own cost. I would be satisfied if this £600+ fee included this but it doesn't. Daylight robbery.

pdV6

16,442 posts

284 months

Tuesday 3rd August 2010
quotequote all
One of the perils of owning a leasehold property without a share of the freehold; you're always at the mercy of the freeholder.

mk1fan

10,839 posts

248 months

Tuesday 3rd August 2010
quotequote all
Even having a share of the freehold doesn't entitle you to do what you want.

At the end of the day you have an obligation to the other leasholders and freeholder not to damage, or cause damage to the property. A structural alteration is going to impact on parts of the property that you have no right to but others do.

Unfortunately, you can't rely on the goodwill of people to do the job properly so an independant process or protocol needs to be in place.

As for your specific job who's to say it's not structural and how do you support this claim? What would happen if removing the wall caused the building to be unstable and the other occupiers need to be rehoused whilst repairs are completed. Are you going to pay for this without hesitation?

What I am saying is that the License is there to protect you as much as it is freeholders.

A worse case scenario would be that you did the works without following the terms of your lease. Cause damage to the property and the freeholder forfeits the remainder of your lease. Now your mortgage company aren't going to like that as your mortgage then becomes an unsecured loan that you still owe them.

As for extortion, it's only as much as you're overpaid for the work you do.

ETA: Do the works actually need a license to alter though? If it's not a structural alteration and you're replacing like for like - ie a wall is going back in the same place then where is the alteration?

Edited by mk1fan on Tuesday 3rd August 13:19


Edited by mk1fan on Tuesday 3rd August 13:34

Rags

Original Poster:

3,674 posts

259 months

Tuesday 3rd August 2010
quotequote all
mk1fan said:
Even having a share of the freehold doesn't entitle you to do what you want.

At the end of the day you have an obligation to the other leasholders and freeholder not to damage, or cause damage to the property. A structural alteration is going to impact on parts of the property that you have no right to but others do.

Unfortunately, you can't rely on the goodwill of people to do the job properly so an independant process or protocol needs to be in place.

As for your specific job who's to say it's not structural and how do you support this claim? What would happen if removing the wall caused the building to be unstable and the other occupiers need to be rehoused whilst repairs are completed. Are you going to pay for this without hesitation?

What I am saying is that the License is there to protect you as much as it is to protect you as much as it is the freeholders.

A worse case scenario would be that you did the works without following the terms of your lease. Cause damage to the property and the freeholder forfeits the remainder of your lease. Now your mortgage company aren't going to like that as your mortgage then becomes an unsecured loan that you still owe them.

As for extortion, it's only as much as you're overpaid for the work you do.




Edited by mk1fan on Tuesday 3rd August 13:16
laugh

pdV6

16,442 posts

284 months

Tuesday 3rd August 2010
quotequote all
mk1fan said:
Even having a share of the freehold doesn't entitle you to do what you want.
True, but where the leaseholders collectively own the freehold it doesn't half make it easier. Common sense usually then prevails without recourse to solicitors.

mk1fan

10,839 posts

248 months

Tuesday 3rd August 2010
quotequote all
So who takes responsibility if things goes wrong?

As I said before licenses are there to protect both parties.

Engineer1

10,486 posts

232 months

Tuesday 3rd August 2010
quotequote all
Also given it is leasehold at somepoint the lease will need extending and a paper trail showing any improvements made will help in the negotiations then.