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Antonio Flores’ Blog

Thoughts about laws and regulations which affect foreigners in Spain

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Posts Tagged ‘San José Construcciones’

Property Buyers’ Legally Consented Rip-Off

April 7th, 2012

Try to guess what is it that the following have in common: an electrical company from Alicante, a cement subcontractor from Valencia, a real estate company from the Balearics, the Spanish Inland Revenue, the Spanish Social Security, 6 banks and 65 employees (2 of which guard an empty plot), on the one side, and 150 consumers that were hoping to acquire Spanish off-plan property on the other.

You guessed right: they are all registered with the courts on occasion of a voluntary company administration arrangement of a large Alicante-based property developer, San José Construcciones, hoping to perhaps get paid some money back over the course of a number of years.

The above scenario, however normal it may appear to be these days, hides a fundamental legal flaw that brings into question, once again, a legal system that has routinely failed to protect those who deserved the utmost protection: consumers.

Such flaw can be inferred from the controversial fact that the first group of creditors are hoping to get paid with the monies of the second group, the buyers, who should have had their deposits bank-guaranteed or insured pursuant to a Franco time law, the Ley 1968/57 Actthat was specifically enacted to avoid the situation they are now in.

In this case-study the irony (or irritation) is that BBVA, the second Spanish bank in size, is queuing up to try to grab a chunk of the money they are supposed to have been guaranteeing in the first place, since they provided a collective bank guarantee to underwrite deposits on a 120-unit development, deposits on which they profited handsomely for the developer’s mortgage and various commissions were being paid out of these. Crazily enough, this bank will only agree to “voluntarily” comply with its mandatory obligation after some arm-twisting, which involves lawyers and legal action.

Another surprising aspect of this all is the fact that criminal case-law states that no developer can use consumers’ down payments for anything else but building the contractually agreed property, and this excludes real estate commissions, admin staff salaries, pocket money…etc. As there is not one brick on the plot, helping consumers get their monies back should be a priority of any property developer, particularly where many lawyers have found that the criminal route can render results (many developers are serving prison terms for this), not the least where the developer has broken the law so blatantly.

Financially ailing developers are probably too traumatized by what has happened and can only hope the market will recover one day (and that lawyers will not press too hard). On the contrary banks shirking their legal, and ethical, responsibilities towards trusting property buyers (Spanish and foreign alike) has to now come to an end, particularly where abundant bank-guarantee case law is invariably favouring consumers and banks are seemingly getting unlimited funding from the Spanish State.

Adaptation of the post originally written for the Olive Press – The Banks Are to Blame.

 

 

Litigation, Property , , , ,