Re: do i need permission from the council to keep chickens and ducks
- From: "Christina Websell" <spamfree@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 11 Oct 2006 21:19:58 +0100
<daz33@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1160590562.643218.213490@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Christina Websell wrote:
<daz33@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1160581436.794775.281930@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Christina Websell wrote:
<daz33@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
,>> >>
Have you only recently bought the house then? If not, the solicitorhi tina my house is mine its not council would i beable to ask over
the phone as the solicitor has the deeds thanks fro your help from
lisa.
should
not have the deeds, they should be with the bank/building who financed
your
mortgage. They keep them in strongroom safes and usually charge a small
fee
for having to get them out as it seems to be a bit of trouble.
I had occasion to need some info from mine once to establish whether
responsibility for fencing a particular side lay with me or the
neighbour.
I told them what I needed and they photocopied the relevant part and sent
it
to me.
I would start by phoning your lender.
Tina
hi tina we bought the house about three years ago and the solicitor has
the deeds ive rang her and she is going to ring me back but i dont no if
she will charge me we will see.
Unless your solicitor actually lent you the money to buy the house, once the
transaction is over the deeds should be sent to your mortgage lender for
safe keeping. Unless things have changed a lot since I bought a house!
I can't see any way that your deeds should still be with the solicitor after
3 years. I would question that with her and ask why she still has them. It
sounds unprofessional to me. What if that firm of solicitors went out of
business or their premises burnt down?
Deeds are precious things and should be kept very safely with your mortgage
lender. It is they who stand to lose if you default, and it is actually
their house until you pay it off. That's why they should have the deeds.
I have now paid off my mortgage and my home is mine now. I could have had
the deeds sent to me but I chose to have the building society keep them in
their metal whatsits, for which I pay a very small yearly charge. I now
have a copy of them, that is enough for me.
Tina
.
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