In 2021 my elderly parents bought a flat in a new development by Martin Oppenheimer which was being marketed by the estate agent Connells. They paid an extra £2,000 for a parking place. On the reservation agreement, issued by Connells, the parking provision is circled, and my parents were given a key fob to access the car park. A year later, my father received a parking ticket while on the site and was informed that he did not have parking registered to his property. It transpires the parking space was omitted from the lease, as Connells did not include it in the memorandum of sale sent to the conveyancing solicitor.
The company has offered a goodwill payment of £1,000 for this shortfall. Martin Oppenheimer has not responded to my inquiries about buying a space. My father trusted that the legal documents were correct and, since he was given access to parking, and parked without hindrance for over a year, he did not have reason to question them.AC, London
This is a baffling and upsetting situation, and neither Connells nor the developer emerges well from it. However, your parents do bear some of the responsibility. Purchasers have to sign the legal documents, including the lease, and it is essential they first read them and flag up any oddities. Conveyancers should also query any anomalies and, if your solicitor was sent the reservation agreement along with the memorandum of sale, they should have questioned the fact that the parking in the former was not included in the latter.
Connells, after its investigation of your complaint, admitted that its staff failed to transpose the parking element on to the memorandum of sale. It can’t account for why, as parking was not included in the lease, a key fob was issued. This
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