Property

Take care when you sign conditional deals

When entering a contract for sale and purchase of land, it is common practice for the contract to be made subject to satisfaction of various conditions, inserted for the benefit of the purchaser. Such conditions may include obtaining approval of mortgage finance or a satisfactory builder's or valuer's report on the property.

Monday, March 29th 2004

If a contingent condition is not satisfied by the due date, either party may give notice cancelling the contract. Often a purchaser is under the mistaken belief that by simply making the contract subject to finance (or any other contingent condition), they are able to use that condition to cancel the contract if they decide not to go ahead with the purchase for any reason.

It is clear, however, that where a contract is subject to a contingent condition, the purchaser must do all things reasonably necessary to enable the condition to be fulfilled.

If a purchaser does cancel a contract on the basis that a condition has not been satisfied and the vendor disputes such cancellation, it is up to the vendor to prove the purchaser failed to take all reasonable steps to satisfy that condition.

If, however, the condition required the purchaser to be "satisfied" with certain matters, the purchaser has the burden of proving to the court that he or she was not satisfied on a reasonable and fair basis. It is clear that it is an objective test that applies in deciding whether a purchaser was lawfully entitled to cancel a contract, unless it is apparent from the wording that satisfaction of a condition is to depend entirely on a purchaser's own subjective opinion. The following two cases illustrate how these rules apply.

Read More - Opens in a new window
SBS FirstHome Combo 6.74
Heartland Bank - Online 6.89
Wairarapa Building Society 6.95
Unity 6.99
Co-operative Bank - First Home Special 7.04
ICBC 7.05
China Construction Bank 7.09
BNZ - Classic 7.24
ASB Bank 7.24
ANZ Special 7.24
TSB Special 7.24
Unity First Home Buyer special 6.45
Heartland Bank - Online 6.55
SBS Bank Special 6.69
TSB Special 6.75
Westpac Special 6.75
China Construction Bank 6.75
ICBC 6.75
AIA - Go Home Loans 6.75
ASB Bank 6.75
Unity 6.79
Co-operative Bank - Owner Occ 6.79
SBS Bank Special 6.19
ASB Bank 6.39
Westpac Special 6.39
AIA - Go Home Loans 6.39
China Construction Bank 6.40
ICBC 6.49
Kiwibank Special 6.55
BNZ - Classic 6.55
Co-operative Bank - Owner Occ 6.55
TSB Special 6.59
SBS Bank 6.79
SBS FirstHome Combo 6.19
AIA - Back My Build 6.19
ANZ Blueprint to Build 7.39
Credit Union Auckland 7.70
ICBC 7.85
Heartland Bank - Online 7.99
Pepper Money Essential 8.29
Co-operative Bank - Owner Occ 8.40
Co-operative Bank - Standard 8.40
First Credit Union Standard 8.50
Kiwibank 8.50

More Stories

Rate cuts needed to lift mood

Wednesday, April 17th 2024

Rate cuts needed to lift mood

The enthusiasm that followed the change in government, mainly from property investors, has waned as homeowners and buyers hang out for interest rate cuts, says Kiwibank.

Support for regulation

Monday, March 18th 2024

Support for regulation

REINZ has emphasised the need for property management regulation to Parliament’s Social Services and Community Committee.

A better investment market

Thursday, March 14th 2024

A better investment market

“Reinstatement of interest deductibility starting from the new tax year on 1 April brings property investors back in line with every other business in the country, where interest costs are a legitimate deductible expense," Tim Horsbrugh, New Zealand Property Investors Federation (NZPIF) executive committee member says.

[OPINION] Recessionary times

Thursday, March 14th 2024

[OPINION] Recessionary times

It is not the best out there for many businesses and property sector people. Sales are down across the board, our clients’ confidence is falling, and there is a lot of uncertainty.