Hello,
Looking for some advice. We bought a house just under a year ago which had had a ground floor extension and loft conversion done under permitted development. Around Christmas 2016 the local council planning office got in touch to say they were acting on a complaint made about the loft conversion from a neighbour - we just learnt the complaint was made summer 2015, 9 months before our purchase and 18 months before the council got in touch with us.
After a couple of visits to the house (Jan and Mar 17) for photos, measuring, the council have ordered us to implement a 20cm setback on the loft conversion, within three months.
When we bought the house we used a top quality surveyor (40 years experience etc), good local conveyancing solicitor, building regs approval in place, all checks done etc. All the work done seems high quality (my dad is an architect and surveyor seemed to think so too so odd the vendor messed up on this matter). What I mean is we weren't completely green and did all the checks we could without knowing the ins and outs of planning law! Obv not the surveyor's job to pick up something like this but we're pretty gutted, we now face an expensive bill to put something right that we had no idea about.
We've already asked the council whether we could apply for retrospective permission but they said no as it would set a precedent, they also said don't bother trying to claim the lack of a 20cm setback was done for structural reasons as they are not interested. On the latter point we don't know if that was the case as don't have access to the architectural plans and the vendor is ignoring my messages over the past month.
I admit I feel a bit lost about what to do next and the last thing we want is the expense and upheaval of putting this right (got a young child plus baby due in the autumn).
Any advice on the first steps? If the vendor knew of the complaint (he must have as the council seemed to think they made a visit to the property while building work was going on in 2015) and he didn't declare it in the property information form (he didn't) could we have a case against him? There doesn't seem any point in appealing the council's orders. How can I obtain the plans for the conversion, is that via the council office? Our solicitors didn't advise us to ask for a certificate of lawful development, is that something that would have alerted us to the fact something was wrong prior to purchase?
Sorry it's so long. Thanks.
Looking for some advice. We bought a house just under a year ago which had had a ground floor extension and loft conversion done under permitted development. Around Christmas 2016 the local council planning office got in touch to say they were acting on a complaint made about the loft conversion from a neighbour - we just learnt the complaint was made summer 2015, 9 months before our purchase and 18 months before the council got in touch with us.
After a couple of visits to the house (Jan and Mar 17) for photos, measuring, the council have ordered us to implement a 20cm setback on the loft conversion, within three months.
When we bought the house we used a top quality surveyor (40 years experience etc), good local conveyancing solicitor, building regs approval in place, all checks done etc. All the work done seems high quality (my dad is an architect and surveyor seemed to think so too so odd the vendor messed up on this matter). What I mean is we weren't completely green and did all the checks we could without knowing the ins and outs of planning law! Obv not the surveyor's job to pick up something like this but we're pretty gutted, we now face an expensive bill to put something right that we had no idea about.
We've already asked the council whether we could apply for retrospective permission but they said no as it would set a precedent, they also said don't bother trying to claim the lack of a 20cm setback was done for structural reasons as they are not interested. On the latter point we don't know if that was the case as don't have access to the architectural plans and the vendor is ignoring my messages over the past month.
I admit I feel a bit lost about what to do next and the last thing we want is the expense and upheaval of putting this right (got a young child plus baby due in the autumn).
Any advice on the first steps? If the vendor knew of the complaint (he must have as the council seemed to think they made a visit to the property while building work was going on in 2015) and he didn't declare it in the property information form (he didn't) could we have a case against him? There doesn't seem any point in appealing the council's orders. How can I obtain the plans for the conversion, is that via the council office? Our solicitors didn't advise us to ask for a certificate of lawful development, is that something that would have alerted us to the fact something was wrong prior to purchase?
Sorry it's so long. Thanks.