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yes, I think that's right. we have a deed of co-ownership which I am now reading for the first time in many years.
it says we can appoint a solicitor for mediation and, if that doesn't work, any of us can go to court "for a decision pursuant to section 14 of the trusts of land and appointment of trustees act 1996".
presumably that court is something very expensive that I'd want to avoid? does it have power to make decisions on any matter? could it appoint a management company if one or more of the owners wanted it?
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presumably that court is something very expensive that I'd want to avoid?
Catastrophically. The legal costs would almost certainly be more than the cost of the work if you get lawyers involved. I'm involved in a similar case at the moment - I act for the owners of the upstairs flat who want to make sure the building doesn't fall down, the owners of the empty downstairs flat don't seem to be that bothered. The solicitors instructing me have given the clients a cost estimate of £30-50k if it goes to trial. I think they might be a bit light on that estimate.
does it have power to make decisions on any matter?
Section 14(2)(a) says the court can make any order ' relating to the exercise by the trustees of any of their functions ... as the court thinks fit.' Since you own the freehold jointly the freehold is, by definition, held on trust. All jointly owned land in England and Wales is held by the owners on trust for themselves. So the court has a pretty wide jurisdiction, but it has to have regard to the factors set out in section 15 of the 1996 Act.
could it appoint a management company if one or more of the owners wanted it?
The court couldn't, no. The First Tier Tribunal can appoint a manger to manage a building under Part II of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1987, but the manager would have to be paid for and you'd need to establish that one of the threshold grounds in section 24(2) are made out.
The easiest way to resolve it legally would probably be to invoke the Right to Manage under Chapter 1 of Part II of the Commonhold and Leasehold Reform Act 2002. You'd have to set up an RTM company, and you'd have to invite the annoying co-owner to participate, but you and the other 'normal' leaseholder would be able to outvote the third one, so between the two of you you'd be in control of management. The trouble with this route is that the resident landlord exemption in paragraph 3 of Schedule 6 of the 2002 Act might well apply, in which case the RTM provisions of the 2002 Act wouldn't apply to your property.
No easy answer, I'm afraid.
If you have a share of freehold then you'll all also have leases with the freehold for your individual flats. I'm not much help beyond that though.