ari
Well-Known Member
The EN house analogy doesn’t work so well owing to the virtual certainty that the legal title will be as it appears on a central registry and so, if no charge is registered and money paid to the registered owner, title will pass to the buyer with any claim as to entitlement to the money being overreached so as to become an issue between the seller and the person claiming the benefit of an unregistered loan.
This body of EN law has built up as both cause and effect of the desire to use houses as a reliable security.
Exactly. The same with a car to a greater extent, there is a tried and tested method of checking for outstanding finance to avoid being left bereft. Might not be absolutely bulletproof, but it's obviously pretty workable.
I think expensive watches and other trinkets are a poor analogy too. If you spend £10,000 on a Rolex, chances are it's a spendable, losable amount. If it turned out to be hooky, well that would be very annoying but unlikely to be life changing for someone happy to splash out £10K on something when he could have chosen to buy something else that does exactly the same job equally well for £100.
I appreciate the same might be true of boats for a fortunate few, but for many of us it is a life changing life savings amount of money that we then protect by insuring and maintaining carefully in the reasonable expectation that at some stage we'll get most of it back on resale (or, worst case, total loss).
I wonder how many people are actually aware of the risk, and how many part with six figures through a broker just assuming that it must be safe because surely it can't just be down to crossing your fingers and hoping? (Spoiler alert - yes it can!)