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  • We bought our flat at the same time as our downstairs neighbour (Victorian terrace divided into two flats, he has the basement, we have the first floor). They had a short lease which was extended to 125 years during the purchase. His plan is to dig a light well in half of the shared front garden and extend out the back, neither of which we are principally opposed to.

    While we were embroiled in major renovations he asked if we wanted to purchase the freehold with him - I said it wasn't our priority but we could look at later. Next thing we know a Section 5A notice pops through our door telling us that he's going ahead with the purchase of the freehold on his own.

    We definitely do not want him as our landlord so we began talking about jointly purchasing it again. We've had lots of back and forward (he wants to do it as ltd company, we just want to be named on the title). His whole reason for buying the freehold is to make his alterations easier, he's asked us to agree in principal to the alterations before we buy the freehold so we've been talking through the details of those.

    Last night he snapped at us requiring assurances that we can get to our roof to make repairs once both gardens are full of extension and light well. He now says we should forget the whole thing and not purchase the freehold.

    Given that he's already tried to buy it outright, it's only 6k in total, and our notice of first refusal has now expired (my understanding is that the freehold can be sold on the open market now) he's probably going to go ahead and buy it himself.

    Is it worth trying to talk him back into buying it together? How bad can it be to have him as a freeholder? He has already been quite shitty about repair work, going back on verbal agreements, vaguely threatening to report our windows to planning... is there way to stop him buying it?

  • could you not buy the freehold on the open market, so you become his landlord? Or does that just get you into a bidding war?
    If you have misgivings about him being your landlord, then I'd say get back to the negotiating table to get a result you can live with.

  • We could, but it'd be 6k for something we don't even really want. It's a long enough lease so we don't need to think about extending it. Half, 3k, was already annoying to pay just to stop him becoming our landlord outright.

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