Mike Seward
Senior Member
- Joined
- Jan 23, 2002
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- Florida
A friend purchased a 10 acre flag lot having 50' frontage on a public road. The plat map on public records shows the flag lot having the 50' frontage. The long legal description in public records describes a flag lot having the 50' frontage. The seller gave the buyer the original survey which matched public records. A new survey was not ordered. The sales contract specified the legal desc. in public records which showed the flag lot.
Apparently, 12 years ago, the seller sold the "pole portion" with the 50' frontage to someone and received a perpetual easement for ingress and egress to the property. This sale was a legitimate sale, but it never showed up in public records.
AFTER closing, the buyer realized the legal description in the closing documents he signed had a new legal description reflecting the sale 12 years ago. He just skimmed the legal at closing and missed the change. He called the title company and was told "don't blame us. You should have read the legal description more closely."
I'm an appraiser, not a lawyer, but I'm thinking that the seller did not deliver what the sales contract specified.
Assuming my friend is stuck with the property, my question is this: what rights are associated with ingress and egress? Can he convert the dirt road to asphalt? Can he run sewer lines, etc?
Any thoughts would be appreciated. Thanks in advance.
Mike Seward
Appraisal Alliance, Inc.
Apparently, 12 years ago, the seller sold the "pole portion" with the 50' frontage to someone and received a perpetual easement for ingress and egress to the property. This sale was a legitimate sale, but it never showed up in public records.
AFTER closing, the buyer realized the legal description in the closing documents he signed had a new legal description reflecting the sale 12 years ago. He just skimmed the legal at closing and missed the change. He called the title company and was told "don't blame us. You should have read the legal description more closely."
I'm an appraiser, not a lawyer, but I'm thinking that the seller did not deliver what the sales contract specified.
Assuming my friend is stuck with the property, my question is this: what rights are associated with ingress and egress? Can he convert the dirt road to asphalt? Can he run sewer lines, etc?
Any thoughts would be appreciated. Thanks in advance.
Mike Seward
Appraisal Alliance, Inc.