To notarize the purchase of a resettlement house, go directly to the notary office to apply for notarization and fill in the notarized application form. After the notarization application is accepted by the notary, the notary will examine the property rights certificate based on the content of the property agreement and inquire whether the parties have been deceived or misled in their contract. The parties concerned should truthfully answer the notary's questions. The notary will fulfill the necessary legal notification obligations and inform the parties of the legal obligations and legal consequences they will bear after signing the property agreement. The notary of the parties concerned will complete the notarization interview transcript and sign the transcript for confirmation. Both parties sign the property agreement in front of a notary. After the completion of the property notarization procedures, the parties concerned can receive the notarization certificate with the fee receipt within the prescribed time limit.
What issues should be paid attention to when purchasing a resettlement house?
1. The nature of the resettlement house is very important and must be clarified.
Resettlement housing is generally divided into two categories:
The first type is supporting commercial housing built due to the relocation of major municipal projects or mid- to low-priced commercial housing purchased. Although the property rights of such houses belong to individuals, they cannot be listed and traded within a certain period of time after acquiring the house. Generally speaking, policy resettlement houses that have not been lived in for five years are not allowed to be sold at market prices or can only be purchased and repurchased by specific groups of people. Even after five years, land transfer fees need to be paid to convert the resettlement houses into commercial housing. Legal sales can then take place. Therefore, home buyers need to find out whether they are qualified to purchase a home.
The other category involves demolition due to real estate development and other factors. The demolition company resettles through other channels or purchases low- and medium-priced commercial houses on behalf of the resettlement people. This type of commercial housing is no different from general commercial housing. It is the private property of the resettled persons. There is no transfer period limit and it can be freely listed and traded.
2. Clarify the contract details.
In addition to the main terms of a general sales contract, the purchase and sale contract for resettlement housing must also have clear provisions on payment methods for additional house purchases and delays in handing over the house, etc. Generally speaking, house buyers who purchase this type of house can sign a conditional contract to ensure the validity of the sales contract in accordance with the relevant provisions of the General Principles of Civil Law and the Contract Law, and make clear agreements on the specific details.
3. Make it clear whether there are any restrictions or policy subsidies for resettled demolition objects.
Especially the current "urban village" reconstruction, which is organized and built by the village collective, has clear restrictions on the resettlement objects.
4. The owner of the house.
Buyers need to determine whether the house is owned exclusively or jointly. If it is owned by family members, the seller of the house purchase agreement must be the true intention of all owners and be equal. The agreement should be signed or have a power of attorney.
5. Payment of relevant fees.
Most resettlement houses involve changing the land acquisition type from allocation to transfer, and the transfer involves the back payment of land transfer fees.