Hello all.
I am a new member of the Forum, and new to the wacky world of
Leaseback.
I purchased an apartment in a Best Western hotel, Bussy St
Georges (near Disneyland Paris).
After a lengthy and difficult purchase (it took over a year), I finally
completed the purchase in April 2009 and promptly discovered within a
few weeks that the management of the hotel had gone out of business.
The hotel closed, and I have not earned a penny in rental income since
that time. In fact, I am paying the mortgage every month and there is a
company called CGS that regularly sends me statements and regular
demands for service charges and fees! For example, we are currently
paying for 24 hour security whilst the hotel is closed. At the end of last
year, I heard from CGS that a new company is preparing to take over
and re-open the hotel, but this hasn't happened yet. Also, I have not
seen any new lease agreements so I do not know what the revised
terms will be.
I see three options:-
- Hold on and hope the situation resoves itself. I don't know when this
will be or what the new lease will look like. I suspect it will be for less
than I originally signed up for, but 'beggars can't be choosers'.
- Try and sell. But who wants to buy a room in a boarded-up hotel
with no rental income???
- 'hand the keys back' and walk away. Highly risky. And the morgage
company (Credit Foncier) will probably persue me in the UK courts for
monies owed.
I thought Leaseback's were supposed to be safe!
It's all a bit crap really, isn't it?
Does anyone on the Forum have any advice?
Many thanks for your help!
BoyWonder41013.4204050926
you need to contact the other owners and form an association with a small group of leaders actively searching another operator. You can pool your resources together to appoint a solicitor to represent your interests. Alone you will not achieve anything.
boywonder
You need to do what Frenchie 2803 says!
You need to go after the "agent" who sold you this disaster and depending on the date you bought,the developer might have joint responsibility for the lack of rent.
john