Hi, my partner and I are buying a property - a stone cottage, built around 1910 I believe. The current owner has been there 50 years and the property has been lovingly improved over the decades and is on the whole very well maintained... BUT we have encountered a couple of hiccups and I have two questions for you lot to see what you think! Trying to get a consensus here...
First part of question:
We are mid-way through the process and it turns out the vendors have no paperwork for the three extensions (and a knock-through) they did in the 1980s/1990s.
We had a level 3 survey done and the surveyor said that while the extensions would certainly not conform to modern building regs due to their age, he could see no signs of them being structurally unsound, and as they've been standing for so long, it's unlikely that they would be unsafe. But that without getting a structural engineer in, it's impossible to know for sure.
I don't think we can get a structural engineer in at this stage - the vendor would need to agree to invasive work being done and I can't see them doing that. The extensions were done too long ago for us to be able to get retrospective planning/building regs (ie, regularisation).
Our concern is around the potential for issues when reselling the property in the future. We don't plan to stay there forever and would hate to be in a situation where we struggle to sell it because of the illegal work that has been done to it and the lack of safety certificates. If WE are having doubts, how likely is it that future potential buyers will also have doubts...? I don't know if we are especially cautious buyers... perhaps most people would be more chilled out about it or perhaps wouldn't consider it an issue at all?
Second part of question:
The house has had some other questionable work done over the years. In the garden, they built a brick workshop with cement floor over a public sewer, without permission. They also put a brick porch out front, which is in breach of either planning rules or a restrictive covenant (or both), and they created a driveway with hardstanding without permission and without a dropped kerb, and the surveyor said there could be public pipes etc running under it and that the council might take issue with that (although they haven't so far).
We can get indemnities for all of these things, but would that be satisfactory for most people? And again, we are concerned about selling the property in the future with these issues in place.
Please let me know your thoughts on both of these questions. Would you buy this house?!