When to use:
Use in any situation where two or more people (or sets of people, for example, couples) share ownership and use of a house, flat or other property for permanent occupation. The agreement is drafted to govern occupation terms where all the owners occupy the property at the same time and the property’s occupation is shared by area. This agreement is suitable in many situations, for example, each owner might have the exclusive right to use a bedroom and shares the use of all other rooms, or each might own some of a virtual flats where each has the exclusive right to use a bedroom, living room, kitchen and bathroom and the only shared area is the entrance hall.
At the outset, you should decide what the most suitable structure for your sharing proposal is. If you are looking at more than ten people, it makes more sense to hold the property in a limited company and buy and sell shares in it. Ownership of the property itself never changes. No stamp duty is paid once it is bought.
However, running a company does cost money. If there are between 2 and 10 owners it is a matter of preference as to whether you want the formality, expense and greater certainty of a company structure and shareholders agreement or the lower cost and comparative informality of an agreement like this.
Net Lawman host two versions. The first is for a situation where only two parties share for example two individuals or two families. The other is designed for more than two parties.
In Irish (and European) law, the registration of ownership does not record the shares in which land (that is, property) is held. So if you own 60% and I own 40% we have to record that in some other document. If we do not do so, “the Law” will assume we own in the shares in which we contributed to the purchase price. This may or may not be the same thing. These Net Lawman agreements specifically records the proportion of each of our shares. They also record shares which may be owned by someone who is not a registered owner. This is called a beneficial interest.
IE-PR541 includes provision for:
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Terms of beneficial interest - beneficial trusts provision
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Price and payment for the Property
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How the parties will use the Property
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Payment of expenses – how, where, what
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Who and how will manage payment of expenses
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Undertakings by the parties
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Alternative exit strategies
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Effect of termination
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What if someone wants to sell his share or sell the property
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Many other “legal” provisions
IE-PR542 includes similar provision, but allows for differences on account of the interaction of three or more people.