Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Wondering if any of you kind folks can help on this matter. We occupy the first floor of a 2 flat house with a share of freehold which states that our responsibility for the freehold would include all repairs that take place from our flat and upwards (roof, etc) with our neighbour on the ground floor responsible for any repairs from his flat downwards. He may have possible subsidence and is looking to get a survey which he thinks both flats are responsible for as he feels the subsidence will affect the entire house we both occupy.


My question is: Are we responsible for splitting the costs for this survey if he detects subsidence in his flat?


Many thanks for any help you can provide!

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/73446-subsidence-help/
Share on other sites

Check your building insurance policy as there should be subsidence cover. But bear in mind that any call to your insurer will result in a potential claim and will possibly affect your insurance cover. To establish whether it is subsidence first would be best. Have you seen the crack? It would have to be very large crack not a fine line crack.


If it is established it is subsidence then your insurer would appoint a loss adjuster, they will make there recommendations and monitoring any movement, cracking. Will look at the surrounding areas for trees etc. It can be a long process but should all be covered under your policy apart from the excess.

The terms of your lease seem very unfair. You are responsible alone for the roof yet you could equally claim that a leaking roof affects the entire building. I've always had shared responsibility for any major work. Worth investigating whether this could be changed.

Firstly - simonethebeaver is right, it's a very unusual lease, usually all major works such as roof or strucutral problems would be shared.


Secondly - you should probably go straight to your buildings insurance (i.e. the shared policy between you and the other flat). They will appoint someone to investigate the issue. I don't see the need for a third party survey.

  • 3 weeks later...

First you should find out what has caused this, since there can be human issues such as damaged drains or natural issues like the land it's built on (https://www.pinterest.com/pin/433471532862838082/)


If it is caused because something human (and by the lower flat) I'd say don't drop a dime at all, but if it is due to something natural like the land or trees I'd say you should help out.

That does sound an unusual lease - surely it's more likely that a property will need work to a roof as opposed to drains ?


Have you seen the lease ? Your solicitor or whoever dealt with your sale should have gone through it with you ,may have given you a copy or might have a copy on file if you ask .

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Not really since the first world war, and mainly in the sense then of 'getting a Blighty one' meaning a wound so serious you had to be sent home. I seriously doubt if one school child in 100 now would know what Blighty meant if the word was presented on its own with no context. 
    • 1 space available due to one of my clients moving.  Message me for more informations  🙂  
    • Why is the name a big of a red flag? Blighty is a common name for the UK whatever people might think.
    • The only election which counts is the General Election.  There is still strong resentment for fourteen year's of Conservative rule. They squeezed the working class's way to hard, then they squeezed the middle class, but somehow the upper class never got touched, funny that.   There is also new resentment for Labour because of the utter balls up they've made of things since coming to power nine months ago. The majority of the population (or at least those with an ounce of common sense) want these clowns out of office ASAP because they see the damage they are doing to UK plc. They squeezed the pensioners, then the farmers and then business. They made and broke promise after promise, or just didn't tell the truth or say what they where going to do, otherwise known as merely lying to get elected. Inflation may be falling but the cost of things in the shops and utility bills keep on rising, the direct opposite of what they promised. They will never be trusted once they are ousted from power in about four and a half years time.   Everything they do and touch causes further harm, led by three stooges, Rayner, Reeves and balls'less Starmer, who couldn't fight his way out of a paper bag. He still thinks he's a solicitor at the DPP. Rather than spending week upon week getting involved in international politics he needs to be sorting out the UK's issues, sadly he's not up to the job and nor are his Cabinet.  Society needs a mix of people with different skills to prosper, not more and more graduates who can't get jobs in what they studied in.   Reform is the current anti establishment party, which will hopefully wither away back to where it came from.  The Liberals and Greens, well what can you say apart from using them as another alternative vote of dissatisfaction, but neither will come to power.  The country seriously needs stability and a Government that stands up for and represents it's people, not what MP's want but what the constituencies want and need.  Government needs to become far more open and transparent, it needs to be seen to be doing its job, doing what MP's are elected to do,  working for the people in the constituencies, getting back to basic principles and rebuilding the trust which has been lost by successive party's immaterial of them being, red, blue, light blue, yellow, green or some other colour.     
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...