Companies

BVC6F Tenants for the Sale of Residential Freehold Property subject to leases

THE TREASURY SOLICITOR
BONA VACANTIA DIVISION

Guidelines for Tenants for the Sale of Residential Freehold Property subject to leases 

Important Notes

1. The attached Guidelines give you information about the sale by the Treasury Solicitor of freehold land and buildings from which leases have been granted. This is called a “freehold reversion”. Please read the Guidelines carefully.

2. The attached Guidelines deal mainly with property divided into flats, but the general principles also apply to leasehold houses and other leasehold property.

3. If you want to buy the freehold of the building that your flat is part of, please follow our requirements set out in the Guidelines and ensure that you provide the information referred to at the end of these guidelines and return with any relevant documents to us at One Kemble Street, London WC2B 4TS.

4. You should firstly talk to the other tenants who own flats in the building to see if they wish to join in and buy the freehold reversion with you.

5. You should then complete and return the attached “Details of Tenancies” form, with FULL REPLIES to the attached questionnaire.

6. If any of the other tenants DO NOT wish to join in and buy they must sign and return to us the attached “Offer Declined” form.

7. As well as the purchase price, the tenants will also have to pay the Treasury Solicitor's legal costs, plus VAT and disbursements. Further information on our costs can be found in our guidelines  on Costs and Charges (BVC 18). 

8. Until you provide the required information and documentation to us, we cannot deal with your request.

9. If you are instructing solicitors to act for you, please supply their name, address, and reference as soon as possible, and let them see a copy of these Guidelines. As the Treasury Solicitor cannot give you legal advice, you should consider instructing your own solicitor if you have not already done so.

10. If the tenants were the former members of the dissolved company they may be able to restore the company to the register, which may be cheaper than buying the freehold interest from the Crown. Details of how to restore a company can be obtained from Companies House, Crown Way, Maindy, Cardiff CF14 3UZ (www.companieshouse.gov.uk)

11. As explained in the attached Guidelines, the Treasury Solicitor has a statutory power to disclaim the Crown's title to the property (i.e. to give up the Crown's right to deal with the property). We will give you 4 weeks to complete and return to us the attached documents, failing which we may have to consider disclaiming the title.

12. These Guidelines contain general guidance and cannot cover every circumstance that may arise. It is not intended to be a complete guide. Each case will be dealt with on its own merits, and the right to vary or depart from these Guidelines at any time without notice is expressly reserved.

Background

1. When a company that was registered under the Companies Acts is dissolved, all its property in England and Wales (but not its liabilities) passes to the Crown as bona vacantia (meaning “ ownerless property ”) because of Section 654 of the Companies Act 1985 or Section 1012 of the Companies Act 2006, depending on when the company was dissolved.

2. If the company's last registered office was in England or Wales (other than in the Duchies of Cornwall or Lancaster) we are nominated by the Crown to deal with its property.

3. If the company owned freehold property from which leases were granted, the company's interest in the property is called a freehold reversion . On dissolution, the freehold reversion passes to the Crown.

What we can do for you

4. Bona vacantia property belongs to the Crown, and the Crown is not obliged to deal with it in any particular way. Normally it will be disclaimed (i.e. the Crown gives up its rights to the property) or sold, and the proceeds of sale transferred to the Exchequer to be deal with in the same way as money raised by general taxation.

5. We can make an offer (subject to contract until completion) to sell the freehold reversion. Although we are not legally bound to do so, we will usually make an offer to sell freehold reversions to all the tenants who wish to buy jointly. Alternatively we can sell to a management company of which all the tenants are members. For further information about our requirements where the freehold is subject to more than one lease, please see the section below headed “What to do next”.

What we cannot do for you

6. We cannot act as your landlord, so we cannot take responsibility for claiming or collecting arrears of ground rents, service charges or other outgoings. However, this does not affect your rights to demand payment of arrears from the other tenants if you buy the freehold reversion.

7. We cannot manage or insure bona vacantia property, so you should take independent advice about this.

8. We will not usually take possession of bona vacantia property.

9. We cannot transfer property with either full or limited title guarantee. This means that when we sell property we do not give any guarantee or assurance that we have the legal right to sell it.

How it works

10. Before we would consider making an offer to sell, we must be sure that the company owned the freehold reversion at the time that it was dissolved.

11. If the title to the property is registered at the Land Registry, this can be proved by producing an official copy of the entries on the register and the title plan showing the company as the registered proprietor - you can get this from your District Land Registry.

12. If the property is not registered at the Land Registry, you will have to give us other evidence that the company owned it. This usually means tracing the original title deeds and forwarding them to us. We cannot deal with the matter until we have satisfactory evidence of ownership.

13. If there is a mortgage or other charge on the property, this will have to be paid off before a sale can go ahead. It is up to you as the purchasing tenants to get the details about this from the person or organisation holding the mortgage or security, and to get the appropriate release.

14. The person or organisation holding the mortgage or security usually has a statutory right to sell the property to pay off the debt owing to them. We will usually agree to them selling the property, and paying us any surplus after paying off the debt. Separate guidelines (BVC 10) on a sale by a mortgagee or creditor are available on this website.

15. In practice, it may be difficult or impossible to pay off the charge within our time limit for a sale. In these circumstances, we would probably disclaim the Crown's legal claim to the property. “ Disclaim” means that we would use the power given to us by Section 1013 of the Companies Act 2006 (or corresponding provisions of previous legislation, depending on when we received notice of the vesting of the property as bona vacantia) to give up the Crown's interest in the property.

16.  If your lease was originally granted for no rent, or merely a peppercorn rent, or other rent having no monetary value, for an original term of 300 years or more of which at least 200 years remains, you should be aware of the special conditions contained in Section 153 of the law of Property Act 1925, which entitles the tenant to acquire the freehold at no cost.

17. There is a minimum price for any sale of £1,000. In addition you will also have to pay the Treasury Solicitor’s proper legal costs, plus VAT and disbursements. Information on our costs can be found in our guidelines on Costs and Charges (BVC 18).

18. In the case of the sale of a leasehold house where the house is worth less than £250,000, or in the case of flats where the value of each flat in the building is worth less than £250,000 and all the flats are leasehold, with leases having at least 80 years left to run before they expire, the price (subject to contract) is 15 times the total of the annual ground rents (whether or not such rent is actually being paid), or £1,000, whichever is the higher.

19. In all other cases we will have to obtain the advice of the District Valuer on both the price and the most appropriate method of sale. Before we will instruct the District Valuer you must send to us a cheque drawn in favour of “The Treasury Solicitor” in the sum of £500, or your solicitor must provide us with his undertaking to pay our costs of instructing the District Valuer to prepare a valuation. 

EXAMPLES

Example 1

There are 8 flats in the building each worth less than £250,000. The annual ground rent for each flat is £20.

Total annual ground rent: 8 x £20 = £160

Fifteen times the total annual ground rents is 15 x £160 = £2,400

Therefore the purchase price for the freehold title is £2,400

Example 2

There are 4 flats in the building each worth less than £250,000. The annual ground rent for each flat is £10.

Total annual ground rent: 4 x £10 = £40

Fifteen times the total annual ground rents: 15 x £40 = £600

Therefore the purchase price for the freehold title is £1,000 (i.e. the minimum price for any bona vacantia asset). 

What to do next

20. If you want to go ahead with the purchase of a freehold reversion where the conditions set out in paragraph 18 apply,  you must give us the following information:

  • the number of flats in the building and which (if any) are currently vacant;
  • a valuation of each flat in the property from a qualified estates surveyor;
  • copies of all of the leases of all the flats (if the leases are all in the same form, we shall only need a copy of one);
  • if the leases have been registered at HM Land Registry, official copies of the entries and title plans relating to all of the leasehold titles;
  • the full names and addresses of all the current tenants, and any other persons using or in occupation of any part of the building;
  • an official copy of the entries on the register and the title plan relating to the freehold title (if registered), or the title deeds to the freehold if unregistered;
  • the current rent (unless this is already clear from the copy documents);
  • the name of the managing agents (if any), or the person to whom you have been paying your rent; and
  • if the tenants are going to buy the freehold in the name of a management company, evidence (before completion of the sale) that the company has been properly incorporated and that all of the tenants involved in the purchase are shareholders in it.

21. If you want to go ahead with the purchase of a freehold reversion where the conditions set out in paragraph 18 do not apply,  you must provide us with all the information above and :

  • details of any sub lettings;
  • details of any arrears of rent and other outgoings;
  • details of any other breaches of covenant that you are aware of;
  • copies of any Schedules of Dilapidations that you are aware of; and
  • copies of any notices served by either the former landlord (the dissolved company) or the managing agents (if any).

22. Where the freehold reversion is subject to more than one lease, we shall need to know whether all the tenants wish to buy it. You should firstly ask the other tenants if they want to take part in the purchase. It is very helpful if you can let us have letters from all tenants confirming what they want to do, or the attached“ Offer Declined ” form duly signed if they do not wish to join in the purchase. If you cannot do this, we shall write to the tenants to:-

  • notify them that the freehold reversion has passed to the Crown as bona vacantia and that we are considering selling it to the tenants jointly;
  • ask them whether they want to take part in the purchase; and
  • warn them that if we do not hear from them within 21 days of the date of the letter, we may go ahead with the sale without further notice.

23. Although we will consider objections to a proposed sale, no tenant has the right or power to veto it.

Money Laundering

24. In accordance with good practice, and with the aim of preventing money laundering, the Treasury Solicitor operates in accordance with the principles laid down in Part VII of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 and the obligation on public authorities including the Treasury Solicitor set out in Regulation 49 of the Money Laundering Regulations 2007.

25. For that reason, the Treasury Solicitor makes such enquiries as are deemed necessary to comply with the Act and the Regulations, including obtaining evidence of identity from those with whom we do business and retaining such evidence in accordance with our record-keeping procedure.

Please note

26. You may want to take professional advice on the important information in this document. It is not our role to give you legal advice - we provide the information as guidance only. We accept no liability for its accuracy and we reserve the right to change or depart from the guidance at any stage.

27. This guidance is not a binding offer or a professional undertaking to sell the property. We reserve the right to disclaim the Crown's claim to the property without notice at any time under Section 1013 of the Companies Act 2006 (or the corresponding provisions of previous legislation, depending on when we received notice of the vesting of the property as bona vacantia. If the Crown disclaims the title to freehold property, the Crown Estate will subsequently deal with the matter. Following disclaimer, any enquiries should be addressed to their Solicitors, who are Messrs Burges Salmon, Narrow Quay House, Narrow Quay, Bristol BS1 4AH. If the title is disclaimed, we will send a copy of the formal notice of disclaimer to all interested parties of whom we are aware.

28. If we do make an offer to sell a property, completion of the sale must take place within the time period that we prescribe. We would generally expect any sale to take place within 12 months of the date that it came to our notice that the freehold reversion was bona vacantia. In the event that appeared unlikely to be possible, our normal policy would be to disclaim the property. 

Further information

You can find copies of all the documents referred to in these guidelines and more information about bona vacantia throughout this website.

Please Note

The purpose of these guidelines is to set out our approach to the property and rights that pass to the Crown as bona vacantia. This document is not an Act of Parliament and it should not be read or interpreted like one. It is intended to provide general guidance only, and it is not a statement of policy.

We will consider each matter on its facts and decide each case on its merits. Our decisions will be based on all the information available to us and we will tell applicants about our decisions as soon as possible. When dealing with any property and rights that pass to the Crown, we act fairly and impartially but in such a way as to not prejudice the interests of the Crown. We aim to be fair in all our dealings and not to take an unfair advantage or to favour one party over another.

Please ensure you provide the following information

1. Details of Tenancies giving full details of the leases and full name and address of the current tenants (as shown below).

2. Specify the amount of the current rent payable under each of the leases.

3. Confirm if any of the flats are sub-let.  If so please provide details of the sub-letting.

4. Copies of any notices served by the landlords on the tenants and/or any Schedule of Delapidations served on the tenants.

5. Provide valuations of all the flats in the block from a qualified estates surveyor. 

6. Copies of all the leases, and if the leases have been registered at HM Land Registry, please supply recent official copy entries of the registered titles. A copy of only one lease is needed if they are all in the same form.

7. If the freehold title is registered at HM Land Registry, please supply recent official office copy entries of the registered title. If the title is unregistered, please give details as to the whereabouts of the original title deeds.

8. Confirm if you intend to set up a new management company to purchase the property.

9. The name, address and reference of the solicitors who will be dealing with the legal formalities upon behalf of the tenants.

 

Details of tenancies form

 

Offer declined form  

This information is available in large print, audio tape and braille formats.

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