Tax assessment: What to watch? One of the obligatory documents without which no real estate transaction/sale, donation, mortgage, including refinancing of a loan can be entered and entered/is the Certificate for tax assessment of the property under Art. 264, para. 1 of the Taxation Insurance Procedure Code/.
Unfortunately, this is also the document that creates a lot of headaches for the owners. There are several reasons for this: from the seller's ignorance of the requisite details of this document and omissions in declaring data changes, to the extremely common technical mistakes made by the tax assessors.
Often, employees make mistakes, and one floor error, for example, would be a notary's refusal to confess the transaction or / worst case / a refusal to enter the transaction by the entry judge. Then you will face a situation where all the fees/notary, local taxes and fees, registration fee - totaling about 4% of the transaction / have been paid, the sale price has been paid and the transaction cannot be entered. We don't wish it on anyone!
If you notice a technical mistake, immediately request a correction!
It's important to know that you don't have to wait and pay for a new tax assessment. The wrong will be corrected by hand, and you must receive the employee's signature and seal.
In the event of a liability, you can pay your debt immediately. Then you will not be issued a new tax assessment again. The employee will add by hand that there is no obligation, and the correction must receive the employee's signature and seal.
It's important to know that such a tax assessment will work for you.
Many property owners, in the misconception, that one copy is "for them," appear to be in the transaction with only one copy. This creates unnecessary tension between the parties to the transaction. Especially when the buyer country is more troublesome because the lack of original documents is a prerequisite for suspected fraud. Both copies must be provided by the owner to the notary at the time of the confession, together with the other documents necessary for the transaction. One copy is intended for the transaction file with the notary public and the other copy is for the Registry Agency.