Legal Question in Real Estate Law in California

Mechanic lien

I'm in process of purchasing a condo and have just learnt that there is a lien($40K) against the property that was placed by the maintenace company which was hired by the HOA to perform work on the entire complex. The HOA is not acknowledging responsibility and will not provide releases. To make matters worse there is a new Prop mngmt company for the HOA. The attorney for the maintenance company will provide a waiver if $8K etc is paid. The lender won't fund the loan until the lien is cleared etc. What are my options. can the sale proceed with the lien pending. What happens if we obtain a letter from the HOA accepting responsibility.


Asked on 4/02/09, 5:25 pm

2 Answers from Attorneys

David Gibbs The Gibbs Law Firm, APC

Re: Mechanic lien

As the buyer, this is actually not your problem (legally). Practically, however, you will probably have to be involved to make sure it gets resolved. The seller is legally responsible for resolving this. Assuming you signed a standard-form CAR purchase agreement and escrow instructions, the Seller is responsbile for delivering clear title to the property at the close of escrow. Any liens must technically be paid by him to clear them at close of escrow - this means if he has to, he will have to pay it out of his proceeds. Its between he and the HOA to resolve who is actually responsbile for repayment of this amount, but the Seller must close escrow, providing clear title at close within the time limits provided for under your contract. As the buyer, you need to stress to him that he must resolve this immediately, and close escrow within the time frame set forth in the purchase agreement, or you will hold him liable for breach of contract. All the seller has to do is instruct escrow to pay the lien out of his proceeds, and obtain a demand and release from the maintenance company. He can fight with the HOA later about who is responsible. Its just not your problem.

*Due to the limitations of the LawGuru Forums, The Gibbs Law Firm, APC's (the "Firm") participation in responding to questions posted herein does not constitute legal advice, nor legal representation of the person or entity posting a question. No Attorney/Client relationship is or shall be construed to be created hereby. The information provided is general and requires that the poster obtain specific legal advice from an attorney. The poster shall not rely upon the information provided herein as legal advice nor as the basis for making any decisions of legal consequence.

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Answered on 4/02/09, 5:40 pm
Bryan Whipple Bryan R. R. Whipple, Attorney at Law

Re: Mechanic lien

I agree with Mr. Gibbs. A buyer of real estate may demand so-called "marketable title" unless the property is specifically offered and accepted subject to disclosed liens. Title is considered unmarketable if there is any significant lien that will not be removed (paid off) by the seller before or at the closing, or any cloud on title. ("Unmarketable" doesn't literally mean the property can't be sold; it means only that the buyer is not obligated to close unless he waives the defect.

In today's market, there are plenty of places available, especially condos, and unless you really, really want this one, I'd tell the seller to produce "marketable title" on schedule or the deal is off. I would never advise a client to inherit a $40K dispute in the hope that it will go away after closing.

That is, unless the client were getting the property at least $40K below fair market value with clean title. Plus a generous allowance for fees and costs to clear the cloud.

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Answered on 4/02/09, 11:27 pm


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