Hello all,
FTB here so bear with me! We put an offer on a detached victorian house (?) which was accepted and going through the checks, survey etc. So I am not sure about the legalities on older properties etc and hoping for an advice or two.
Looking at the deed, no information on when it was built. The first entry was 2008 for a covenant on the land from 1933. The next entries were from a couple of years ago when current owner bought it. Is this normal for an old house and would they have building reg paperwork etc from that time? Or can I assume that the covenant was for the land and the house.
Also, at the back of the property, there seems to an extension which is the kitchen. No information on this either (no application on local authority) but looking at historical aerial photo, this is already there from 2005 and possibly even older - we couldn't go further back. Is this a concern?
The house itself is in a good condition, we saw 2 cracks that were noticeable. The previous owner, not current, had renovated it to a good standard. Certs for window replacement in 2017 and cavity wall insulation, I havent seen the certs tho - CPS done - requested this to our solicitor already. Just wondering if we worry over nothing.
Thanks
				
			FTB here so bear with me! We put an offer on a detached victorian house (?) which was accepted and going through the checks, survey etc. So I am not sure about the legalities on older properties etc and hoping for an advice or two.
Looking at the deed, no information on when it was built. The first entry was 2008 for a covenant on the land from 1933. The next entries were from a couple of years ago when current owner bought it. Is this normal for an old house and would they have building reg paperwork etc from that time? Or can I assume that the covenant was for the land and the house.
Also, at the back of the property, there seems to an extension which is the kitchen. No information on this either (no application on local authority) but looking at historical aerial photo, this is already there from 2005 and possibly even older - we couldn't go further back. Is this a concern?
The house itself is in a good condition, we saw 2 cracks that were noticeable. The previous owner, not current, had renovated it to a good standard. Certs for window replacement in 2017 and cavity wall insulation, I havent seen the certs tho - CPS done - requested this to our solicitor already. Just wondering if we worry over nothing.
Thanks




 Also, they state if covenant is broken, the current owner - or prev owner if sale goes through - must be compensated. Which makes them the covenantee? I guess that's align with  the wording, The Purchaser and all person claiming title under him...
 Also, they state if covenant is broken, the current owner - or prev owner if sale goes through - must be compensated. Which makes them the covenantee? I guess that's align with  the wording, The Purchaser and all person claiming title under him... 