Joined: 20/04/2020(UTC) Posts: 375
|
ANDREW FOSTER;191351 wrote:Ad B;191342 wrote:ANDREW FOSTER;191264 wrote:
I'd run a mile.
Insurance, if you had to claim, you will be tied up in knots and massive stress for years. In the meantime half your house may be demolished, but you can't buy another as the insurance hasn't paid out. Just consider being in that scenario.
And it will never properly compensate for market values etc.
They may also not have lost the deeds, just saying they have as they don't want you to see them.
I just wouldn't go there. Gigantic red flags all over it. The vendors need to offer a proper package or not at all.
Don't listen. He hasn't got a clue. Ask him when the last time was that he bought something that needed an indemnity policy. Or when he needed to claim on an indemnity. What you should do is pin your solicitor down to an opinion. Get it in writing. It's actually amazing how often these types of indemnities are taken out. And even more amazing how rarely they are used. They're extremely useful, as in the situation as quoted above by Bens Dad. Let me tell you then. We bought a house that had a loft conversion that had a planning consent number. We had a full structural survey, you know the ones with legal professional indemnity cover. It was all OK'd by the solicitor. Turned out after that though the planning had been applied for, it had never been inspected or signed off. It was structurally unsound and had been done by a cowboy builder. There then followed 2 years of legal wrangles and claims on the surveyor's indemnity and the solicitors professional cover. It took nearly £10,000 of expenses to settle the claim, with eventually the stance that "you can accept this minimal compensation or we are going to keep this in court for ten years and we are solicitors". The replacement work cost £60,000 and we got £25,000 "compensation" plus no refund of the £10,000 of legal expenses. Now tell me I have no clue. That is my experience. What is yours? Just reread your post. You're not even talking about a specific indemnity policy, you're talking about the general indemnity insurance that the prof has. Nothing to do with the situation that the op is querying about. Good grief.
|