General Questions (Heritable Building Rights)

  • Erstellt am 2020-05-04 17:00:59

saralina87

2020-05-15 08:02:55
  • #1
Just throwing it out there: I see several expiring leasehold agreements at work every week - the proportion where it is not extended or where the leaseholder does not ultimately acquire the property for next to nothing is really, really, really small.
 

Matthew03

2020-05-15 08:24:54
  • #2


Is the question serious? I have already given you the answer to that in the entire post.

Do you also answer my questions or do you just pull individual sentences out of context?
These were the questions:



Otherwise I can only agree with , then you should actually hardly "do" anything anymore...
 

Pinky0301

2020-05-15 08:33:17
  • #3
The chance of dying while driving a car (e.g.) is probably much higher than being expropriated.
 

saralina87

2020-05-15 08:40:36
  • #4


Could it be that you understand these clauses as "expropriation"?
Then yes: It is more likely with heritable building rights, as it is contractually regulated.
In practice, however, it hardly ever happens.
 

nordanney

2020-05-15 09:06:56
  • #5
By the way, we are all "expropriated" a little every day. The savings interest rate is basically 0%, inflation is higher. It's just not called expropriation.
 

11ant

2020-05-15 12:51:27
  • #6
I believe the frequency of extensions, but in the end making it effectively a kind of rent-to-own I consider atypical. Ten thousand questions are definitely still too many. A few weeks ago Shiny86 had to experience here that after 800 posts without approaching a goal even I dismount a dead horse.
 
Oben