PROPERTY
After the Purchase: The Horror Stories to be Avoided.
“They’ve taken away the cooker and all the curtains we especially wanted!”
A matter to be incredibly careful about on a purchase is the furniture, fixtures and fittings which may or may not be included in the sale. The writer has seen more hassle and disputes over fireplaces and carpets and presses in his experience as a solicitor than over the house itself. I once had vendors sell a nice Ranelagh house and then bring my purchaser client to court over a €150 rug. Try to establish clearly what is not for sale and what is being included with the house itself.
Generally, most fixtures (fireplaces, rads etc) stay with the property while some fittings lights, rugs, lino etc) may be removed unless otherwise provided for in the contract. Fireplaces are not to be moved under any circumstances unless perhaps both parties have agreed to their sale. A lot of old carpets, presses, curtains etc are worth extraordinarily little but quite handy to tide the purchaser and his family over for the time being. It is hardly rocket science to go through all these items with the vendors agent and agree on a list of items what you may like to purchase.
Unless you are buying a Picasso over the fireplace, none of these items even an old table or bed should set you back very much. If you want none of them at all you are perfectly entitled to ask the vendor or his agent to arrange to have all of them taken out of the house before you take over. And the day before the sale closes, you should arrange with the vendors agent to show you the house so you can see it is vacant and that items which should be there are actually present.
I heard of a young couple who did just that after the sale closed on a Friday (having paid a substantial sum of money) and when they opened the hall door to their new home, they found one of the vendor family still eating their dinner and watching the Late Late show.
Clarity is king. Do not accept a clause that says, “curtains in the living room are included in the sale.” Believe me, several purchasers have taken over their new home to find a ragged old pair of curtains in the living room while the nice wool ones they had admired and wanted are nowhere to be seen. Ensure the wording is something like “the purchase price includes the current cream wool curtains in the living room.”
Most vendors and purchasers are fair and decent, but some vendors can be truly awful. My wife and I offered a vendor € 2/3 k for all contents in the bungalow (the selling agent Sherry Fitz advised us this was a fair price). But the vendor wanted €10,000 for most old stuff and we refused; telling him he had therefore to remove all these fitting, carpets etc out of the house. In the end he nearly steamed off the wallpaper, removed all the light fittings, unscrewed some bulbs, removed all the carpets and underlay but left scores of sharp carpet tacks everywhere. He also – illegally – took some freestanding units in the kitchen which we forced him to reinstate. Truly the vendor from hell.
So be careful and agree in writing with the agent what you want and what you are prepared to offer for it and do not go overboard.
A.C. FORDE & CO. LLP
SOLICITORS