I have lived in my subdivision 12yrs....a year ago I put my home on the market, sold it and 1hr before closing it all stopped...the builder of the subdivision did not build the road to meet guide lines for the county to maintain the road...no one was aware of this...the only option I have is to sell USDA or cash only...here it is a yr later and I still haven't sold...almost impossible I feel like...I tried getting the other homeowners to sign a homeowners agreement but have one that refuses...any suggestions? by lilredhead_@msn.com from Madison, Alabama. Jul 30th 2014
the first thing I would do is talk to other folks in your neighborhood and find out who they used to obtain financing.. the road issue might be a problem with your lender but not with others.. if that doesn't work, then contact an attorney and see if you have recourse against the builder.. .. I'm a Broker here in Scottsdale AZ and I only lend in Arizona. If you or someone you know is looking for financing options, feel free to contact me or pass along my information. William J. Acres, Lender411's number ONE lender in Arizona. 480-287-5714 WilliamAcres.com
I would speak to an attorney about the liability of the developer of the subdivision. Also, typically City and/or County inspectors sign off on the main parts of developments such as water, sewer, and roads in order to start building homes....... What is the homeowners reasoning for not wanting to sign a home owners agreemetn for road usage? It would seem necessary for any of the current home owners to be able to sale would be to work together now.
Contact your real estate attorney and your local Town/County Government andexplain your situation. You may want to speak with your neighbors as this effects them as well. As a group you may be able to have a bigger voice in your community.
What exactly is it that wasnt built to "guide lines" for the County to maintain the Road? That could be a gray area in lending guidelines.If you can't go after the builder/developer due to them filing BK, can you find out from the City/County if they had to meet certain guidelines to develop the land, and who signed off on those. I know of a developer here in KS that was developing in the County, but wanted City access for certain things and the City Engineers signed off on his road ways. A few years later the roads started having issues and the owners came back to the developer and the developer was able to go back to the City Engineers office who signed off and they had to pay.I loaned on some land last year next to a lake where the roads were not wide enough for county to take over and the HOA had to maintain the roads..... but there was no HOA so it was an owners agreement to keep the road maintained. With a homeowners agreement in place it allowed us to lend. At that time I was with WFHM; we discovered the issue on the appraisal and it had to be addressed. We physically had to have the home owners sign this agreement to close the loan.I am going on a limb and say that this is going to be a general lending issue based on information that the lender will get back on the appraisal. But I would still call local lenders and explain exactly what is going on with the roadway and the maintenance of it. See if they have any products that could help; come local banks still do loans in-house and can get around this issue. Credit Unions also do all of their loans in-house and may not have an issue.Beyond that, if you cant work the lending issue out you have a bigger problem. What happens when the road starts to break down and you have pot holes to be fixed. At that time, without a homeowners agreement the burden to fix the road will be on the home owners who actually care about the neighborhood. I am not sure about AL laws, but I would talk to an Attorney that specializes in HOA's and see what the vote count has to be to actually start an HOA. You may not need the last home owner to start one. Once there is an HOA in effect you could have the HOA sign a road maintenance agreement and that would allow for the sale. It would also force the non-compliant home owner to help pay for any road work to be done in the future.You can contact me at JSchnell@BNCBank.com if you have any more questions. I hope this has been of some help.
My initial though is the same as William. Find out what the neighbors did for financing. I'm pretty sure they all didn't pay cash.
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