Hello, I apologise if this thread is rather long.
My parents purchased their property in 2000 and initially owned the property as joint owners but later changed to tenants in common in 2007. When my father died in 2012 I inherited his half of the property. In 2015 we visited a solicitor to get my name added alongside my mother's to the title deed and remove my father's name. We also requested that my mother and I change to joint owners instead of tenants in common as my mother was worried that I would start moving my friends or future boyfriends into the property. I remember saying to the solicitor that if either of us died we wanted the survivor to inherit.
My mother died in 2022 and I notified the Land Registry of her death and that I was now the sole owner. They responded asking for more information saying the form A restriction still applied to the property. I wasn't sure exactly what was meant by a form A restriction but responded as best as I could. Unfortunately I was unable to locate any correspondence from the solicitor we had dealt with in 2015 at this time and I just responded with a covering letter and forms RX3 and ST5 that they asked me to fill out. For some inexplicable reason I had thought that what they were asking about was the timeline of how the form A restriction had initially been applied to the property back in 2007. I therefore did not even mention the solicitor visit in 2015 by my mother and me.
Anyway, yesterday I finally managed to locate the paperwork from the solicitor visit in 2015. There were 3 letters in total all headed 'Transfer of Equity'. The first letter states "I have now been able to prepare the Transfer Deed which I enclose ready for signing. This document will transfer the ownership of the property into your joint names".
The second letter states "I can confirm that completion has taken place and the Transfer has been dated with today's date, making it legally effective. I have also applied for registration of the transfer into your joint names."
The third letter states "I am pleased to confirm the registration of the transfer has been completed at the Land Registry. You will see this shows your joint ownership as tenants in common."
I can remember seeing this letter back in 2015 and just reading the first line. I just assumed from seeing the words 'joint owners' in the first two letters that our instructions had been carried out and I I put the letter away.
I really don't know what went wrong, whether the solicitor made a mistake (he no longer works for the company), or whether Land Registry made a mistake back in 2015. Where the solicitor referred to the term 'joint owners' in the first two letters I had just assumed he had done everything we had asked for. Any forms I had filled out for probate I had filled out in good faith thinking the property was held as joint owners!
Can I request the file (which I believe is kept for about 10 years) from the solicitor's office? Would this give me any information about what we had initially requested the solicitor to do? What is kept in a file, is it just the letters and forms he sent us or would there be a copy of any notes he had made at our first appointment or any tape recordings of our meeting (I don't know if that's a thing that solicitors do when they meet clients)? If anyone can help shed some light on this I would be very very grateful. If it does only contain the letters and forms he sent us I don't want to go to the expense of paying out for no reason. Would the solicitor's office ask why I want it? Is the file something I have to sit and read at the solicitor's office or is it something I am allowed to take home and read in my own time, without feeling rushed? And lastly how much does it roughly cost to retrieve a file from the archives?
Thank you.
My parents purchased their property in 2000 and initially owned the property as joint owners but later changed to tenants in common in 2007. When my father died in 2012 I inherited his half of the property. In 2015 we visited a solicitor to get my name added alongside my mother's to the title deed and remove my father's name. We also requested that my mother and I change to joint owners instead of tenants in common as my mother was worried that I would start moving my friends or future boyfriends into the property. I remember saying to the solicitor that if either of us died we wanted the survivor to inherit.
My mother died in 2022 and I notified the Land Registry of her death and that I was now the sole owner. They responded asking for more information saying the form A restriction still applied to the property. I wasn't sure exactly what was meant by a form A restriction but responded as best as I could. Unfortunately I was unable to locate any correspondence from the solicitor we had dealt with in 2015 at this time and I just responded with a covering letter and forms RX3 and ST5 that they asked me to fill out. For some inexplicable reason I had thought that what they were asking about was the timeline of how the form A restriction had initially been applied to the property back in 2007. I therefore did not even mention the solicitor visit in 2015 by my mother and me.
Anyway, yesterday I finally managed to locate the paperwork from the solicitor visit in 2015. There were 3 letters in total all headed 'Transfer of Equity'. The first letter states "I have now been able to prepare the Transfer Deed which I enclose ready for signing. This document will transfer the ownership of the property into your joint names".
The second letter states "I can confirm that completion has taken place and the Transfer has been dated with today's date, making it legally effective. I have also applied for registration of the transfer into your joint names."
The third letter states "I am pleased to confirm the registration of the transfer has been completed at the Land Registry. You will see this shows your joint ownership as tenants in common."
I can remember seeing this letter back in 2015 and just reading the first line. I just assumed from seeing the words 'joint owners' in the first two letters that our instructions had been carried out and I I put the letter away.
I really don't know what went wrong, whether the solicitor made a mistake (he no longer works for the company), or whether Land Registry made a mistake back in 2015. Where the solicitor referred to the term 'joint owners' in the first two letters I had just assumed he had done everything we had asked for. Any forms I had filled out for probate I had filled out in good faith thinking the property was held as joint owners!
Can I request the file (which I believe is kept for about 10 years) from the solicitor's office? Would this give me any information about what we had initially requested the solicitor to do? What is kept in a file, is it just the letters and forms he sent us or would there be a copy of any notes he had made at our first appointment or any tape recordings of our meeting (I don't know if that's a thing that solicitors do when they meet clients)? If anyone can help shed some light on this I would be very very grateful. If it does only contain the letters and forms he sent us I don't want to go to the expense of paying out for no reason. Would the solicitor's office ask why I want it? Is the file something I have to sit and read at the solicitor's office or is it something I am allowed to take home and read in my own time, without feeling rushed? And lastly how much does it roughly cost to retrieve a file from the archives?
Thank you.
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