I have a query re a valuation for a mortgage which someone else may have similar experience of, or thoughts on.
My sister about 8 years ago took out a buy to let mortgage, but the property valuer put on the property valuation that the property had 6 bedrooms instead of 2. There always was, and still are, only 2 bedrooms in the little cottage. The valuer also wrote that the property had central heating, when it had (and still has) none, and double glazing, when it had (and still has) only single glazing. The borrower only saw the valuation recently, when she obtained the file from the bank, and was shocked at the information on the valuation.
Also, the "valuer" the bank used had only an engineering qualification, and was a self-employed draughtsman / engineer from his house. He is not known locally as a valuer. However the "valuer" was on the banks panel of valuers. It is obvious the valuer inflated the property so the borrower could get a mortgage. If the property was valued correctly, the borrower would not have got the mortgage.
I wonder what legal recourse this borrower may have when the valuer / bank's loan officer have breached the bank's criteria for issuing mortgages so that the borrower obtained a mortgage that they simply did not qualify for or could not afford, as mortgage repayments were very unsustainable?
My sister about 8 years ago took out a buy to let mortgage, but the property valuer put on the property valuation that the property had 6 bedrooms instead of 2. There always was, and still are, only 2 bedrooms in the little cottage. The valuer also wrote that the property had central heating, when it had (and still has) none, and double glazing, when it had (and still has) only single glazing. The borrower only saw the valuation recently, when she obtained the file from the bank, and was shocked at the information on the valuation.
Also, the "valuer" the bank used had only an engineering qualification, and was a self-employed draughtsman / engineer from his house. He is not known locally as a valuer. However the "valuer" was on the banks panel of valuers. It is obvious the valuer inflated the property so the borrower could get a mortgage. If the property was valued correctly, the borrower would not have got the mortgage.
I wonder what legal recourse this borrower may have when the valuer / bank's loan officer have breached the bank's criteria for issuing mortgages so that the borrower obtained a mortgage that they simply did not qualify for or could not afford, as mortgage repayments were very unsustainable?