ARTICLE
5 May 2010

High Court Backs Developer Chasing Payment for Failed Off-Plan Completion

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Matthew Arnold & Baldwin

Contributor

Matthew Arnold & Baldwin
Irish property developer Ballymore has won a High Court judgment against a buyer who tried to pull out of the purchase of one of its flats in its Pan Peninsula scheme in London.
United Kingdom Real Estate and Construction

Irish property developer Ballymore has won a High Court judgment against a buyer who tried to pull out of the purchase of one of its flats in its Pan Peninsula scheme in London.

The Court ruled that Natasha Rashid must pay Ballymore the £279,200 balance due on the flat she agreed to buy, plus interest and legal costs. Ms Rashid had put down a £69,800 deposit on the luxury flat, agreeing to pay the remainder of the purchase price once the flat was completed. The Court also said that if Ms Rashid fails to comply with the order by the end of April, Ballymore will be able to resell the property and seek a court order for damages against her.

This ruling highlights the growing number of claims being brought by housebuilders and developers against purchasers who renege on their contracts. A recent investigation by the property journal Estates Gazette found that between August 2008 and December 2009, nearly 300 claims were lodged against buy-to-let investors who had not completed on off-plan purchase contracts. These findings came to the fore when, in December 2009, the High Court backed housebuilder Prestige Homes South West in its attempt to obtain payments from an investor over two failed completions in its Zero 4 scheme in Plymouth, awarding it damages of £133,000.

There is no doubt that these two recent rulings are good news for developers and housebuilders, who have invested a lot of time and money in their developments and rightly expect purchasers to honour their contracts. However, off-plan buyers have become victims of the decline in the property market, with many of the properties they put deposits down on now worth much less than when they agreed to purchase them. Buyers have been unable to obtain mortgages once the value of their properties fell and buy-to-let investors have been unable to sell their properties on at a higher price than they paid.

It is an unfortunate situation for all concerned, and, although similar disputes are being settled out of court, more court cases should be expected.

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