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(a) Before the buyer signs a contract for the purchase of a new single-family residential real property in the County, the seller must disclose to each prospective buyer that a real property tax credit may be available to the buyer for the cost of installing accessibility features or the cost of Level I or Level II accessibility standards to the property as defined in Section 52-18U(a).
(b) The disclosure must include general information about the types of improvements for which the credits are available and an estimate of the general cost to make the improvements.
(c) A seller or the seller’s agent is not liable for any incorrect information disclosed under this Section if the seller or the seller’s agent relied in good faith on information provided by the County to describe the credit or to estimate the amount of the credit. (2013 L.M.C., ch. 32, § 1.)
This Article does not supersede or otherwise affect any duty of a property seller, real estate agent, or broker to fully disclose all specific facts relevant to or affecting any property, imposed by any other law or regulation or any common law principle. (1974 L.M.C., ch. 43, §1; 1997 L.M.C., ch. 15, § 1; 2000 L.M.C., ch. 28, § 1.)
Editor's note—Former Sec. 40-13, relating to the applicability of this article within incorporated municipalities, derived from 1974 L.M.C., ch. 43, § 1, was repealed by § 25 of 1985 L.M.C., ch. 31. See § 2-96.
(a) Definitions. In this Section, the following words have the meanings indicated:
Department means the Department of Environmental Protection.
Director means the Director of the Department or the Director’s designee.
Home energy audit means an evaluation of the energy efficiency of a home which includes any test or diagnostic measurement which the Department finds necessary to:
(1) ensure that a home’s energy efficiency is accurately measured; or
(2) identify steps that can be taken to improve a home’s energy efficiency.
Office of Sustainability or Office means the Office of Sustainability in the Department of Environmental Protection created in Section 18A-13.
Single-family home means a single-family detached or attached residential building.
(b) Before signing a contract for the sale of a single-family home, the seller must provide the buyer with:
(1) material approved by the Department that gives information about home energy efficiency improvements, including the benefit of conducting a home energy audit; and
(2) copies of the electric, gas, and home heating oil bills or cost and usage history for the single-family home for the immediate prior 12 months, unless the single-family home was unoccupied for the entire prior 12 months. If the seller did not occupy the single-family home for the entire prior 12 months, the seller must provide the buyer with the required information for that part of the prior 12 months, if any, that the seller occupied the single-family home.
(c) The Office of Sustainability must evaluate options to encourage homeowners to conduct a home energy audit, including whether the County should require a home energy audit to be conducted before the sale of a single-family home. (2008 L.M.C., ch. 8, § 1; 2014 L.M.C., ch. 15, § 1.)
Editor’s note—2008 L.M.C., ch. 8, § 2, states: Applicability. Section 40-13B, as added by Section 1 of this Act, applies to any sales contract signed on or after January 1, 2009.
(a) Definitions. In this Section, the following words have the meanings indicated:
Department means the Department of Environmental Protection.
Director means the Director of the Department or the Director’s designee.
Single-family home means a single-family detached or attached residential building. Single-family home does not include a residential unit that is part of a condominium regime or a cooperative housing corporation.
Radon means a radioactive gas found in the air that comes from the natural breakdown of uranium in soil, rock, and water.
Radon test means measuring the amount of radon in an indoor space:
(1) with a device made for this purpose;
(2) approved for use by the Director; and
(3) performed in accordance with the protocols specified for the device used.
(b) Except as provided in subsection (c), a single-family home located in the County must be tested for radon before completing a sale of the home. The radon test must be performed less than one year before the settlement date. The seller must either perform the test or permit the buyer to perform the test. Both the seller and the buyer must receive a copy of the results of the radon test.
(c) The settlement of the sale of a single-family home located in the County may be completed without a radon test if the sale is:
(1) exempt from the transfer tax under Md. Tax-Property Code, §13-207, as amended;
(2) by a lender or an affiliate or subsidiary of a lender that acquired the home by foreclosure or deed in lieu of foreclosure;
(3) a sheriff’s sale, tax sale, or sale by foreclosure, partition, or by court appointed trustee;
(4) a transfer by a fiduciary in the course of the administration of a decedent’s estate, guardianship, conservatorship, or trust; or
(5) a transfer of a home to be converted by the buyer into a use other than residential or to be demolished. (2015 L.M.C., ch. 50, §1.)
Any violation of this Article is a class A violation. The Office of Consumer Protection must enforce this Article. (1974 L.M.C., ch. 43, § 1; 1983 L.M.C., ch. 22, § 47; 1997 L.M.C., ch. 15, § 1; 2007 L.M.C., ch. 22, § 2)
(a) In this article, the following words have the meaning indicated:
New home means any newly constructed dwelling unit. "New home" includes any single- family home, townhouse, row house, or condominium which has not been previously sold and occupied.
Buyer means the original buyer of a new home.
Buyer's agent means any person expressly designated by the buyer to serve as the buyer's representative at a pre-settlement inspection. "Buyer's agent" does not include an employee or agent of the seller.
Seller means any person or firm engaged in the business of selling new homes, or to whom a new home has been conveyed for resale in the course of business.
Seller's agent includes an employee of a seller or an independent, licensed real estate agent representing a seller.
(b) This article applies to any contract for the sale of a new home entered into on or after March 15, 1989. It applies to all new homes sold in Montgomery County, whether the new home is built before or after the date of the contract.
(c) The conveyance of a new home to an intermediate person to evade any liability or obligations to a buyer under this article or any other law does not remove the new home from the requirements of this article. (1989 L.M.C., ch. 25, § 1.)
(a) Any buyer of a new home may inspect the new home before settlement. The home may be inspected by the buyer, who may be accompanied by a buyer's agent. The seller and buyer should negotiate the date and time of the inspection. However, the seller must allow an inspection not less than 24 hours nor more than 72 hours before settlement, unless the buyer agrees otherwise. This article does not prevent a buyer and seller from agreeing to more than this one inspection.
(b) The seller must allow a reasonable time to conduct the inspection. The seller or the seller's agent may attend the inspection.
(c) Any contract for the sale of a new home must include a statement that the right to a pre- settlement inspection is guaranteed by County law. (1989 L.M.C., ch. 25, § 1.)
(a) Any contract for the sale of a new home must clearly disclose the estimated settlement date, if any, and all other contract performance dates relating to the delivery of the home.
(b) These dates must all be disclosed in the same paragraph of the contract. (1989 L.M.C., ch. 25, § 1.)
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