1. Call the voa & confirm never valued. 2. Call the council & tell them. 3. Appoint a solicitor. 4. Receive bill (27 years x £2k may be = £54k??) 5. Arranging a bridging loan to pay the council. With the solicitor to get an agreement that debt is settled. 6. Sell the house & repay bridging loan
Why would you appoint a solicitor to deal with the council if you're just going to pay any bill they send?
These things are possible. I didn’t pay gas for 2 years when I bought my new build as I wasn’t registered anywhere. Took two years of constant phone calls and insisting that “yes I do have gas and it works” to various companies before it got sorted. Turns out it was register with the plot number and never changed to the actual house number and street name. I often wonder if I should of just left it and had free gas and how long it would have took for it to be noticed
Councils tend to be a bit more on the ball with new builds, rather than energy companies, or at least I thought so. After all, they gave permission for the thing to be built there in the first place. You'd think they would follow it through.
I guess the lesson here is never underestimate the incompetence of a local council.
I have a hunch the OP will discover that the council tax has been paid, perhaps in cash at the council office or by paypoint. All this talk of solicitors and £50k bills is a bit premature.
That being said, I'm watching with great interest to see what happens!
I have a hunch the OP will discover that the council tax has been paid, perhaps in cash at the council office or by paypoint. All this talk of solicitors and £50k bills is a bit premature.
That being said, I'm watching with great interest to see what happens!
Time will tell - it would not be the first or last property that has escaped detection for decades.
I no longer work in Council Tax Recovery but instead work as a specialist Council Tax paralegal assisting landlords and Council Tax payers with council tax disputes and valuation tribunals. My views are my own reading of the law and you should always check with the local authority in question.
These things are possible. I didn’t pay gas for 2 years when I bought my new build as I wasn’t registered anywhere. Took two years of constant phone calls and insisting that “yes I do have gas and it works” to various companies before it got sorted. Turns out it was register with the plot number and never changed to the actual house number and street name. I often wonder if I should of just left it and had free gas and how long it would have took for it to be noticed
New estates can be a nightmare for council tax - especially so where the plot numbers have been changed during the construction and no-one ended up entirely sure what was what on a development of 50+ houses (that was especially fun to try and sort).
I no longer work in Council Tax Recovery but instead work as a specialist Council Tax paralegal assisting landlords and Council Tax payers with council tax disputes and valuation tribunals. My views are my own reading of the law and you should always check with the local authority in question.
1. Call the voa & confirm never valued. 2. Call the council & tell them. 3. Appoint a solicitor. 4. Receive bill (27 years x £2k may be = £54k??) 5. Arranging a bridging loan to pay the council. With the solicitor to get an agreement that debt is settled. 6. Sell the house & repay bridging loan
Why would you appoint a solicitor to deal with the council if you're just going to pay any bill they send?
One step at at a time.
Contact VOA
Report back here.
Hi Fatbelly (great username btw!)
Expect it could be a more complex probate matter than just inheriting the house now.
Also expect she’d want a solicitor to get in writing from council that debt is settled for house sale conveyancing & no future claims?
Replies
One step at at a time.
Contact VOA
Report back here.
I guess the lesson here is never underestimate the incompetence of a local council.
That being said, I'm watching with great interest to see what happens!
She’s plucking up the courage to call the voa.
Expect it could be a more complex probate matter than just inheriting the house now.
Also expect she’d want a solicitor to get in writing from council that debt is settled for house sale conveyancing & no future claims?
I’ll post again when she hears back.