Land registry.

http://www.landregistry.gov.uk/

Wont let me direct url link so ill guide you.

Click on the orange bar that says public, then underneath the next orange bar that says "Do it online" click on "order title registers and title plans online", then I would click on the detailed search option and go from there. Might set you back a few quid, but nothing crazily expensive.
 
Cheers, going by their map it looks like they are only England and Wales.
Would need to be Scottish Variant.
In short we (freind and myself) suspect he's been renting a room off some-one who's renting the flat anyway. So in a way sub renting.
She rent's two rooms out, both with yale locks and what looks like fire doors. So appears to fall into HMO licenses. But yet it's a family house.

Anybody know the legal ramifications of this anyway?
 
Well there wasn't any specification as to where the property is, so I just assumed. But assumption is the mother of fudge ups I guess :)

That ros system seems complicated and a bit long winded! By comparison to the Land Registry anyway.
 
Oh woopdy doo. Who cares? What business is it of yours?

Is this this weeks version of "the Pakistani shop is selling single units from a multipack! Phone MI5!" :rolleyes:.
 
Oh woopdy doo. Who cares? What business is it of yours?

Unfortunately for me my stubborness and the view of "you've messed with me/someone I care about, now time to get even and for you to pay"

Well there wasn't any specification as to where the property is, so I just assumed. But assumption is the mother of fudge ups I guess :)

That ros system seems complicated and a bit long winded! By comparison to the Land Registry anyway.

Yeah, and searches seems to through up it's own made up internet looking error.
 
There was a thing about this a while ago where people would get the details of empty houses and write to the owners and ask if they actually needed them since they were empty and most of the time in a sorry state of repair. Sometimes the owner had died and didnt have any family and the estate was on the list for the government to claim it (10 years i think if no next of kin are found) I know of at least one time were the house was just given to the guy that made the enquiry since it was left to an old man who didnt really need it who just ask the guy who wrote to him if he would like it so he signed it over to him all legal and stuff. Also, there was a case with a really big house in london were a squatter had been living for something like 15 years. The owner of the house took him to court to evict him but the judge awarded the house to the squatter telling the owner that you clearly have no use for a house you have not used for 15 years. The squatter promptly sold the house for something like 1.5million and moved back to scotland.
 
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