I have a good friend on the Upper East who is trying to sell her condo apartment. I believe it's the first sale in their building, as it was sold as new construction a few years back. Besides it being the first sale, I'm pretty sure none of the board members have experience with running a condo or co-op board before, or even know the difference between a condo and a co-op.
The first surprise was that the managing agent produced this massive board package, something that you would see being required for a nightmare co-op building. 9 sets of reference letters (personal and professional) per applicant. Multiple collated copies with page dividers and tabs. That sort of thing. So miraculously, the buyer went through with it, despite being shocked that a condo building would have such an onerous application (a red flag to me at least). Keep in mind condo applications, if there even is one, are typically one page or two at most, and are basically light registration forms.
Now that the purchase application has been completed and delivered to the managing agent, the condo board is apparently hemming and hawing about whether to approve the buyer. One of them looked up the buyer online and found an unfavorable news article about the buyer, some sort of past litigation. Other board members are chiming in and saying that their source of funds looks fishy. Meanwhile, this buyer is paying all cash for a multi-million dollar apartment...
Can you believe this? As someone who has lived in both a condo and a co-op, it's very clear that these folks don't understand that they live in a condo, not a co-op.
A condo does not have the right of approval, unlike a co-op. A condo board has two choices. Either issue a waiver of their right of first refusal, or pony up the cash to buy the apartment at the same terms.
Any suggestions on what to do? Thank you!
The first surprise was that the managing agent produced this massive board package, something that you would see being required for a nightmare co-op building. 9 sets of reference letters (personal and professional) per applicant. Multiple collated copies with page dividers and tabs. That sort of thing. So miraculously, the buyer went through with it, despite being shocked that a condo building would have such an onerous application (a red flag to me at least). Keep in mind condo applications, if there even is one, are typically one page or two at most, and are basically light registration forms.
Now that the purchase application has been completed and delivered to the managing agent, the condo board is apparently hemming and hawing about whether to approve the buyer. One of them looked up the buyer online and found an unfavorable news article about the buyer, some sort of past litigation. Other board members are chiming in and saying that their source of funds looks fishy. Meanwhile, this buyer is paying all cash for a multi-million dollar apartment...
Can you believe this? As someone who has lived in both a condo and a co-op, it's very clear that these folks don't understand that they live in a condo, not a co-op.
A condo does not have the right of approval, unlike a co-op. A condo board has two choices. Either issue a waiver of their right of first refusal, or pony up the cash to buy the apartment at the same terms.
Any suggestions on what to do? Thank you!
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