Marlborough Express

Inspection trap for property investors

- SUSAN EDMUNDS

Property investors are being left vulnerable by a loophole that means they sometimes miss out on properly checking properties before they buy them.

Kevin Edmunds, of property managers Quinovic in Wellington, said he had dealt with a number of investor buyers who had been caught out.

Usually, property purchasers have a right to an inspection before a deal settles, to ensure that there are no problems that need to be fixed. But there is an exception when a property is sold with a tenant in place. Edmunds said that would apply to up to 35 per cent of properties in the market.

In those cases, buyers usually have no right to demand one last check.

Edmunds said he had seen buyers become anxious about what damage might have happened to a property.

‘‘I had one guy who was investing $900,000 in a house and he was thinking ‘is it going to slide off the side of the hill?’ That sort of anxiety is not helpful.’’

It was becoming increasing­ly important, he said, because a court ruling last year meant tenants were no longer liable for accidental damage to properties.

‘‘You need to determine when the damage happened, whether it was under the new owner and his insurance or the previous ownership and their insurance. Tenants often say ‘I don’t know when that happened’.’’

He raised this with the Real Estate Agents Authority in September and was told they are not concerned about it.

‘‘However, rental properties are about 35 per cent of all properties in the country so those sold with tenants intact will have the right to inspection voided by the REINZ current sales and purchase agreement which precludes the right to inspection when there is not vacant possession,’’ he said.

‘‘We have advised many of our investor owners considerin­g a property purchase to ensure they put a special clause in allowing final inspection when a sitting tenant will be involved.’’

Then it would just be a matter of arranging the inspection with enough notice to the tenant, he said.

REAA chief executive Kevin LampenSmit­h said the issue highlighte­d the importance of good legal advice when buying and selling property.

‘‘When a property is sold with a current tenancy there is no right to final inspection prior to settlement, so a buyer would be wise to have this inserted as an additional condition in the sale and purchase agreement.’’

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 ?? PHOTO: 123RF ?? In some cases prospectiv­e buyers are not entitled to one last check.
PHOTO: 123RF In some cases prospectiv­e buyers are not entitled to one last check.

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