ItDepends
Freshman Member
- Joined
- Dec 2, 2022
- Professional Status
- Appraiser Trainee
- State
- Massachusetts
After a long drought, I've been given a report to work on. The subject, an office building, was purchased in 1990 by the current owner. Prior to that, it last sold in 1985. The 1985 deed contains a restriction stating that if the property is resold at any point in the future, the 1985 Grantor/seller has the right to match the offer. I'm in MA, and from what I've read, it appears deed restrictions are only enforceable here for 30 years in most cases.
1. How do I determine if this restriction has expired, or is an exceptional case extending beyond the 30 years?
2. If the restriction is still enforceable, how do I determine the affect of the restriction on the fee simple value? My initial thought is that it wouldn't affect the value. If a future sale was to an arms length buyer, then allowing the 1985 seller an opportunity to match the offer still means the property is selling for a price reflected by the market. However, I've never worked on a deed restricted property, so I'm probably wrong.
(the owner isn't trying to sell the property, it's for an equity loan if that matters)
1. How do I determine if this restriction has expired, or is an exceptional case extending beyond the 30 years?
2. If the restriction is still enforceable, how do I determine the affect of the restriction on the fee simple value? My initial thought is that it wouldn't affect the value. If a future sale was to an arms length buyer, then allowing the 1985 seller an opportunity to match the offer still means the property is selling for a price reflected by the market. However, I've never worked on a deed restricted property, so I'm probably wrong.
(the owner isn't trying to sell the property, it's for an equity loan if that matters)