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Building a Home
If you
want to build a new home, there are
other things you need to know before
you begin. Learn about construction
standards and about buying land, so
you know your rights.
MPS Supplementing Model Building
Codes
The Minimum Property Standards (MPS) establish certain minimum standards for buildings constructed under HUD housing programs. This includes new single family homes, multi-family housing and health care type facilities.
HUD Minimum Property Standards and
How They Supplement the Model
Building Codes
Until the mid-1980's, HUD maintained separate Minimum Property Standards for different types of structures. Since that time, HUD has accepted the model building codes, including over 250 referenced standards, and local building codes, in lieu of separate and prescriptive HUD standards. However, there is one major area of difference between the MPS and other model building codes- durability requirements. Homes and projects financed by FHA-insured mortgages are the collateral for these loans and their lack of durability can increase FHA's financial risk in the event of default. More specifically, the model codes do not contain any minimum requirements for the durability of such items as doors, windows, gutters and downspouts, painting and wall coverings, kitchen cabinets and carpeting. The MPS includes minimum standards for these, and other items, to ensure that the value of an FHA-insured home is not reduced by the deterioration of these components.
HUD Field Office Acceptance for
Areas without Building Codes
HUD requires that each property insured with an FHA mortgage meet one of the nationally recognized building codes or a State or local building code based on a nationally recognized building code. In areas where such State or local codes are used, HUD determines if the State or local code is comparable to the model building code. There are also areas of the United States that do not have building codes. If no State or local building code has been adopted, the appropriate HUD Field Office will specify a building code that is comparable to one of the nationally recognized model building codes. Interstate Land Sales The Interstate Land Sales program protects consumers from fraud and abuse in the sale or lease of land. In 1968 Congress enacted the Interstate Land Sales Full Disclosure Act, which is patterned after the Securities Law of 1933 and requires land developers to register subdivisions of 100 or more non-exempt lots with HUD and to provide each purchaser with a disclosure document called a Property Report. The Property Report contains relevant information about the subdivision and must be delivered to each purchaser before the signing of the contract or agreement.
Buying Lots from Developers
Be well informed when shopping for land. Lots may be marketed as sites for future retirement homes, for second home locations, or for recreational or campsite use. However, be wary of any investment aspect that may be stressed by sales personnel. If you plan to purchase a lot which is offered by promotional land sales, take plenty of time before coming to a decision. Before signing a purchase agreement, a contract, or a check:
This report is prepared and issued by the developer of this subdivision. It is not prepared or issued by the Federal Government. Federal law requires that you receive this report prior to signing a contract or agreement to buy or lease a lot in this subdivision. However, no federal agency has judged the merits or value of the property. If you received the report prior to signing a contract or agreement, you may cancel your contract or agreement by giving notice to the seller any time before midnight of the seventh day following the signing of the contract or agreement. If you did not receive this report before you signed a contract or agreement, you may cancel the contract or agreement any time within two years from the date of signing. Your Contract Rights If the lot you are buying is subject to the jurisdiction of the Interstate Land Sales Full Disclosure Act, the contract or purchase agreement must inform you of certain rights given to buyers by that Act. The contract should state that the buyer has a "cooling-off" period of 7 days (or longer if allowed by State law) following the day that the contract is signed to cancel the contract, for any reason, by notice to the seller, and get his or her money back. Furthermore, unless the contract states that the seller will give the buyer a warranty deed, within 180 days after the contract is signed, the buyer has a right to cancel the contract for up to 2 years from the day that the contract is signed unless the contract contains the following provisions:
It has always been the law that if the developer has an obligation to register with the Interstate Land Sales Division, the developer or sales agent must give the buyer a copy of the current property report before the buyer signs a contract. Otherwise, the buyer has up to 2 years to cancel the contract and get their money back. That fact must also be clearly set forth in all contracts. You may have the right to void the contract if the subdivision has not been registered with HUD or you were not given a property report. Furthermore, if the developer has represented that it will provide or complete roads, water, sewer, gas, electricity, or recreational facilities in its property report, in its advertising, or in its sales promotions. The developer must obligate itself to do so in the contract, clearly and conditionally (except for acts of nature or impossibility of performance). In addition to the right to a full disclosure of information about the lot, the prospective buyer may have the right to void the contract and receive a refund of their money if the developer has failed to register the subdivision with HUD or has failed to supply the purchaser with a property report. While a purchaser may have the right to void the contract with the developer under these conditions, the purchaser may still be liable for contract payments to a third party if that contract has been assigned to a financing institution or some similar entity. The registration is retained by HUD and is available for public inspection. If the property report contains misstatements of fact, if there are omissions, if fraudulent sales practices are used, or if other provisions of the law have been violated, the purchaser may also sue to recover damages and actual costs and expenses in court against the developer. However, depending on when your sale occurred, you may be barred from taking further action due to the Act's statute of limitations. Your attorney can advise you further on this matter.
"Cooling-Off" Period
Even if you received the property report prior to the time of your signing of the contract or agreement, you have the right to revoke the contract or agreement by notice to the seller until midnight of the seventh day following the signing of the contract. You should contact the developer, preferably in writing, if you wish to revoke your contract and receive a refund of any money paid to date. Even if the property report is delivered to you before you sign a sales agreement ... the law gives you a "cooling off " period. This right cannot be waived.
A Word about the Interstate Land
Sales DivisionThe HUD unit which administers the law, examines the developer's registration statement, and registers the land sales operator is the Interstate Land Sales Division. Except for disclosure purposes, this office is not concerned with zoning or land use planning and has no control over the quality of the subdivision. It does not dictate what land can be sold, to whom, or at what price. It cannot act as a purchaser's attorney. But it will help purchasers secure the rights given to them by the Interstate Land Sales Full Disclosure Act. HUD is authorized by law to conduct investigations and public hearings, to subpoena witnesses and secure evidence, and to seek court injunctions to prevent violations of the law. If necessary, HUD may seek criminal indictments. HUD is authorized by law to conduct investigations, if necessary, seek criminal indictments.
Exemptions from the Law
The prospective buyer should be aware that not all promotional land sales operations are covered by the law. If the land sales program is exempt, no registration is required by HUD and there will be no property report. Here are some of the specific situations for which the statute allows exemptions without review by HUD. Sale of:
Know the Developer
Knowing your rights under the law is the first step in making a sensible land purchase. To exercise those rights you also must know something about the honesty and reliability of the developer who offers the subdivision that interest you. Don’t fail to ask questions. Whether you are contacted by a sales agent on the telephone or by mail, at a promotional luncheon or dinner, in a sales booth at a shop-ping center, or in the course of your own inspection of the subdivision, make it your business to find out all you can about the company and the property. In addition, get any oral promises or representations in writing. Don’t fail to ask questions. If you are seriously interested in buying a lot, ask if the company is registered with HUD or is entitled to an exemption. Request a copy of the property report and take the time to study it carefully and thoroughly. If you still have unanswered questions, delay any commitment until you have investigated. Discuss current prices in the area with local independent brokers. Talk to other people who have purchased lots. A local Chamber of Commerce, Better Business Bureau, or consumer protection group may have information about the seller's reputation. Inquire through county or municipal authorities about local ordinances or regulations affecting property similar to that which you plan to buy. Don't be high-pressured by sales agents.
Know the Facts about the Lot
Once you have decided on an appealing subdivision, inspect the property. Don't buy "site unseen." Check the developer's plans for the project and know what you are getting with your lot purchase. It's a good idea to make a list of the facts you will need to know. Some of the questions you should be asking, and answering, are these:
Know What You are Doing
Interstate land sales promotions often are conducted in a high-pressure atmosphere that sweeps unsophisticated buyers along. Before they are aware that they have made a commitment, these buyers may have signed a sales contract and started to make payments on a lot. They may be delighted with the selection made but, if not, it may be too late for a change of mind.
Nine Dishonest Sales Practices
Here are some of the practices avoided by reliable sales operations. Watch out for them and exercise sales resistance if you suspect they are occurring.
1.
Concealing or
misrepresenting facts about current
and resale value. Sales
agents may present general facts
about the area’s population growth,
industrial or residential
development, and real estate price
levels as if they apply to your
specific lot. You may be encouraged
to believe that your piece of land
represents an investment which will
increase in value as regional
development occurs. A sales agent
may tell you that the developer will
resell the lot if you request. This
promise may not be kept. Future
resale is difficult or impossible in
many promotional developments
because much of your purchase price
-sometimes as much as 40 percent-
has gone for an intensive
advertising campaign and commissions
for sales agents. You are already
paying a top price and it is
unlikely that anyone else would pay
you more than you are paying the
developer. You may even have to sell
for less than the price you paid for
the lot originally. Sales promotions
often are conducted in a
high-pressure atmosphere.
Furthermore, when you attempt to
sell your lot, you are in
competition with the developer, who
probably holds extensive, unsold
acreage in the same subdivision. In
most areas real estate brokers find
it impractical to undertake the sale
of lots in subdivisions and will not
accept such listings. It is unlikely
that the lot you purchase through
interstate land sales represents an
investment in the view of
professional land investors.
Remember, the elements of value in a
piece of land are its usefulness,
the supply, the demand, and the
buyer's ability to resell it. The
Urban Land Institute estimates that
land must double in value every five
years to justify holding it as an
investment. In some areas the cost
of holding the land, such as taxes
and other assessments, can run as
high as 11 percent a year.
2.
Failure to honor refund
promises or agreements.
Some sales promotions conducted by
mail or long distance telephone
include the offer of a refund if the
property has been misrepresented, or
if the customer inspects the land
within a certain period of time and
decides not to buy. When the
customers request the refund, they
may encounter arguments about the
terms of the agreement. The company
may even accuse its own agent of
having made a money-back guarantee
without the consent or knowledge of
the developer. Sometimes the
promised refund is made but only
after a long delay.
3.
Misrepresentation of facts
about the subdivision. This
is where the property report offers
an added measure of protection. A
sales agent may offer false or
incomplete information relating to
either a distant subdivision or one
which you visit. Misrepresentations
often relate to matters such as the
legal title, claims against it,
latent dangers such as swamps or
cliffs, unusual physical features
such as poor drainage, restrictions
on use, or lack of necessary
facilities and utilities. Read the
property report carefully with an
eye to omissions, generalizations,
or
unproved statements that may tend to mislead you. If you are concerned about overlooking something important, discuss the report and the contract with a lawyer who understands real estate matters. The developer also may use advertisements that imply that certain facilities and amenities are currently available when they are not. Read the property report to determine whether these facilities and amenities are actually completed or proposed to be completed in the future. If the company advertises sales on credit terms, the Truth in Lending Act requires the sales contract to set forth fully all terms of financing. This information must include total cost, simple annual interest, and total finance charges.
4.
Failure to develop the subdivision
as planned. Many buyers
rely upon the developer's
contractual agreement or an oral
promise to develop the subdivision
in a certain way. The promised
attractions that influenced your
purchase -golf course, marina,
swimming pool- may never materialize
after you become an owner. If they
are provided, it may be only after a
long delay. If you are planning on
immediate vacation use of the
property or are working toward a
specific retirement date, you may
find that promised special features
of the development are not available
when you need them.
5.
Failure to deliver deeds,
title insurance policies.
Documents relating to the sales
transaction may not be delivered as
promised. Some sales in the
promotional land development
industry are made by contract for a
deed to be delivered when the
purchaser makes the last payment
under the terms of the contract. A
dishonest developer may fail to
deliver the deed or deliver it only
after a long delay. A sales agent
may offer false or incomplete
information.
6.
Abusive treatment and
high-pressure sales tactics.
Some sales agents drive prospective
customers around a subdivision in
automobiles equipped with citizen
band radios which provide a running
commentary on lot sales in progress.
The customer may be misled by this
and other sales techniques to
believe that desirable lots are
selling rapidly and that a hurried
choice must be made. Hurrying the
buyers into a purchase they may
later regret is only one ploy of
high-pressure sales agents. More
offensive is abusive language used
to embarrass customers who delay an
immediate decision to buy. In some
instances hesitant buyers have been
isolated in remote or unfamiliar
places where transportation is
controlled by the sales agent or the
agent's organization.
7.
Failure to make good on
sales inducements. Free
vacations, gifts, savings bonds,
trading stamps, and other promised
inducements are used to lure people
to sales presentations or to
development sites. These promised
treats may never materialize.
Sometimes special conditions are
attached to the lure or a customer
is advised that gifts go only to lot
purchasers. A "free vacation" may be
the means of delivering the
prospective buyer to a battery of
high-pressure sales agents in a
distant place. The promised
attractions may never materialize.
8.
"Bait and switch" tactics.
Lots are frequently advertised at
extremely low prices. When
prospective buyers appear, they are
told that the low-priced lots are
all sold and then are pressured to
buy one that is much more expensive.
If the cheaper lot is available, it
may be located on the side of a
cliff or in another inaccessible
location. If accessible, it may be
much too small for a building lot or
have other undesirable features. The
buyers may be lured to the property
with a certificate entitling them to
a "free" lot. Often the certificate
bears a face value of $500 to
$1,000. If the buyers attempt to
cash it in, the amount is simply
included in the regular price (often
inflated) of the lot they choose.
Often this so-called "bait and
switch" technique has a delayed
fuse. Buyers who purchase an unseen
lot for later retirement may be
unpleasantly surprised when they
visit the development. The lot they
have paid for may be remote from
other homes, shopping, and medical
facilities. It may be insufficiently
developed for use. When the buyers
complain, sales personnel attempt to
switch them to a more expensive lot,
applying the money paid for the
original lot to an inflated price
for the new one and tacking on
additional financing charges. If the
unhappy purchasers lack sufficient
funds to accept this alternative,
they are left with an unusable,
unmarketable first choice. Some
sales agents provide a running
commentary on lot sales in progress.
9.
Failure to grant rights
under the Interstate Land Sales Full
Disclosure Act. Purchasers
may not be given copies of the
property report before they sign a
sales contract. Some sales agents
withhold this detailed statement
until customers choose a specific
lot. Sometimes the buyers receive
the report in a mass of promotional
materials and legal documents.
Unaware that the report is in their
possession, they fail to read and
understand it before signing a sales
contract.
For the
best inspector in your neighborhood
visit
www.InspectorLocator.com or
call1-877 FIND-INS.
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George Timmerman CHI - CMIA* 280 Kemp RD * Suwanee GA 30024 * (470) 545-9824 |