Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Pacifica point of sale sewer lateral certificate, ordinance from 1/1/12


Property owners are responsible for sewers up to their property line clean-out.  If there is no  property line sewer clean-out, the property owner is responsible to the city sewer.  .

California land title association, Bulletin, 12/8/11.   Garrett and Tully, an express article from the California land title association, "City of Pacifica Adopts point of sale sewer certificate."

The property owner is responsible to their sewer to property line clean-out.  Or, to the city sewer 
"The City of Pacifica recently adopted a new ordinance requiring property owners to obtain a “Sewer Lateral Compliance Certificate” prior to transferring ownership. The City of Pacifica will begin enforcement on January 1, 2012.  A copy of the city's enforcement policy is viewable here. The Sewer Lateral Compliance Certificate lists six reasons for the application (a copy of the application itself can be viewed here), including a transfer of ownership or a property remodel. There are specified exemptions, such as transfers to a revocable trust, between co-owners and between spouses.

The transferor is required to disclose the requirements of the ordinance.  The responsibility is also on the transferor to obtain the Compliance Certificate. A copy of the Certificate must be provided to the transfer’s real estate broker and escrow holder, if any, and the transferee.

The ordinance provides that the requirement to obtain a Compliance Certificate prior to transfer of title in no way affects the legality of the transfer of title in the underlying property transaction.  If the certificate cannot be obtained prior to the transfer to title the ordinance permits the property owner to request a time extension of 180 days.  However, if the work is not completed within 180 day of the extension, the escrow funds, which were required to be deposited to obtain the extension, may be forfeited, and the current property owner must demonstrate compliance.  After close of escrow the current property owner is responsible for all cost associated with compliance.

Violations include the failure to obtain the Certificate, failing to post required funds in to an escrow account and failing to perform the work after receiving an extension.  Falsifying facts to obtain an exemption or Certificate and presenting a false Certificate also violate the ordinance.
The California Insurance Code provides that certain title insurance provisions constitute the exclusive regulation of the conduct of escrow and title transactions by entities engaged in the business of title insurance, notwithstanding any local regulation or ordinance."

Related - City of Pacifica, "Sewer and waste pater" questions and answers. "What are my responsibilities as a homeowner regarding building sewer repair and replacement?  The City of Pacifica’s Sewer Maintenance Ordinance Section 6-9.02 states the City is responsible for maintenance and repair of the building sewer from the property line clean-out to the main sewer. If no property line clean-out exists, the homeowner is responsible all the way to the main sewer."

Related Fix Pacifica City sewer reprint articles.

Posted by Kathy Meeh

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Any feedback out there from local realtors on how this thing is really working? Or, not working?

Anonymous said...

Thanks for posting this. It helps understand better.

Anonymous said...

Local realtors. Haha only about 5 showed up to talk about this. Every realtor in town should have went to council.

Cecilia Quick, screed. Every property owner in town then ran off with a fat severence check.

Some home owner should sue to challange this money grab by city hall.

The decayed city pipes are causing the problems. Not the homeowners pipes.

Another pathetic city hall move. The whole dammed council would have buckled had shown up.

The realtors deserve this broken down bankrupt city.

Realtors should be disclosing the sorry state of Pacifica's finances. I would be pissed if I spent $700,000 for a house and the city went bankrupt. Or the county takes over.

Pacifica is the new East Palo Alto!

Anonymous said...

whatev. when do we get our ikea?