Bridget M. Rose
Last April, the Boston launched a new
Co-Purchasing Housing Pilot Program (“Program”). The Program, which is one of
several initiatives adopted in
accordance with Mayor Wu’s Boston’s 2025 housing
strategy, is a new loan program intended to improve homeownership opportunities
by encouraging co-purchasing to permit multiple households to leverage their
combined purchasing power to acquire multifamily properties. Zero-percent
interest deferred loans, payable upon sale, transfer, or refinance, to help
participating households cover the costs of the down payment and reasonable
closing costs, will be offered for eligible households earning up to 135% of
the area median income (AMI).
The Program is designed to promote
co-ownership of multifamily properties in Boston, but it appears to only
support participating homebuyers in the purchase of multifamily properties to
be held in common ownership, as joint tenants or tenants-in-common. The Program
is not designed to support groups of homebuyers who wish to purchase and own a
multifamily property through a trust or corporation, and in fact, actively
discourages participants from purchasing a multifamily property for ownership
through the condominium form. By expressly deterring participants from using
the condominium form of ownership, the Program may leave co-owners without the
necessary tools for successful ownership of a multifamily property.
Eligibility, Requirements, & Benefits
Participants in the Program can receive
zero-percent interest deferred loans, payable upon sale, transfer, or
refinance, to help cover the costs of down payment (in an amount up to five
percent of each household’s share of the purchase price) for the purchase of
eligible multifamily properties. Eligible households earning up to 100 percent
AMI (approximately $130,600 in Boston) can receive up to $50,000, and eligible
households earning up to 135 percent AMI (approximately $176,300 in Boston) can
receive up to $35,000.
To be eligible for the Program, each
homebuyer must:
- -
Meet the qualifying criteria for a Boston Home Center (BHC)-approved
First Mortgage;
- -
Be considered a “First-Time Homebuyer”;
- -
Have an income below or equal to 135 percent AMI;
- -
Contribute at least 1.5 percent of the purchase price of
their share of the property;
- -
Have less than $100,000 in liquid assets (excluding
government-sponsored retirement accounts);
- -
Agree to occupy the home as their primary residence; and
- -
Enter into a “co-ownership agreement.”
Eligible properties are two- or
three-family vacant homes located within the City of Boston, with as many
vacant, unoccupied units as participating households listed as joint owners on
the mortgage.
In addition to these eligibility
criteria, participants must also (1) sign an affidavit expressing their
commitment to occupy the property as their primary residence, and (2) agree to
create and execute a co-ownership agreement that specifies, at a minimum, the
proportion of ownership; how expenses and property maintenance are to be
handled; and agreed-upon options or procedures should one or more of the
participating households agree to move out or sell.
Types of Ownership & the Co-Ownership Agreement
One of the requirements of the Program
is that participants agree to, and execute, a co-ownership agreement, and that
a finalized, signed version of the agreement is received by the city prior to
closing. The “Guide to Co-Purchasing” provides a detailed breakdown of the
subjects that can (and should) be included in the co-ownership agreement, such
as:
- -
Decision-making, such as consensus versus voting based on
percentage shares;
- -
The collective use of the property, such as designating
common areas and private space;
- -
Financial and insurance arrangements, such as initial
monetary contribution, shared expenses, and major repairs and renovations;
- -
Managing home operation and upkeep;
- -
Managing co-owner misconduct, such as misuse of common
funds;
- -
Dispute resolution; and
- -
What happens if someone wants to move out or sell.
Looking at these recommendations for
the co-ownership agreement, one can’t help but notice that many of the
suggestions—designating common areas and private space, holding money in a
common account for home expenses, and consequences for violations of the
co-owner agreement—are some of the basic concepts found in condominium
ownership. It is easy to understand why the Program would encourage co-owners
to consider these factors, as they address many of the most significant issues
that arise from common ownership. However, even if participants create an
ownership agreement that contemplates all of the fundamental concepts of
condominium ownership, common ownership of the kinds contemplated by the
Program can still fall short.
Potential first-time homebuyers may
jump at the opportunity for co-ownership, excited by the prospect of owning a
home but not realizing how difficult common ownership is until real problems
come home to roost. For this reason, I don’t agree with the notion that a
condominium is not “the best option” for owner-occupied properties. For
example, both condominiums and traditional common ownership of multifamily
properties encounter the problem where one owner fails to contribute their
share to the common expenses, to the detriment of all other owners; however,
only a condominium has a mechanism to promptly address this delinquency and, if
necessary, foreclose on the unit to collect the unpaid expenses through the
statutory lien enforcement process set forth in G.L.
c. 183A, § 6.
The purpose of this article is not to
take the blanket position that traditional common ownership is always ill-advised,
but rather, to increase awareness of the potential drawbacks of common
ownership outside the condominium form and to inform readers that homebuyers
interested in the Program may wish to consider the benefits of forming a
condominium after closing on a multifamily property.
Having said that, it is not entirely
clear from the currently available resources on the Program whether
participants can take advantage of the financial assistance offered by the Program
if they transition from co-ownership to condominium ownership. The Program’s
“Frequently Asked Questions” provide that co-purchasers who wish to form a
condominium organization can do so “after the fact,” but does not go into
detail about how or whether doing so would impact the financial assistance
offered by the Program. For example, the zero-percent interest deferred loans offered
by the Program are “repayable upon sale, transfer, or refinance.” Converting
the property to condominium status would necessarily result in a change in
ownership type, and require a transfer of the co-owners’ interest by Master
Deed. To the extent that a loan granted pursuant to the Program would become
repayable in this situation, it is a significant flaw that participants that
could not benefit both from the financial assistance offered by the Program and
the protections of condominium ownership. There are many reasons why
co-purchasers may wish to create a condominium in order to benefit from certain
protections that they would not have in a joint tenancy or tenancy-in-common,
and it is troubling that the Program may create an ultimatum—if you want the
protection of the condominium form, you can’t retain the benefits of your loan
and financing.
Conclusion
Homebuyers considering the Program
should be aware of the types of co-ownership that are allowed and consider the
potential drawbacks of traditional co-ownership as compared to the protections
afforded by condominium ownership. The fact that the Program resources appear
to actively discourage ownership through the condominium form is indicative of
a larger issue with the Program, which is that it apparently prioritizes the
statistics of first-time homeownership at the expense of allowing for
sustainable ownership structures.
As any homeowner will tell those of us
who have never owned a home (I fall into the latter group), nothing prepares
you for the unexpected surprises that come with owning a home for the first
time. There are also unique, sometimes even more difficult surprises that come
with co-owning a home. The condominium form of ownership is a unique thing,
which exists as a hybrid form of property ownership—an option for people to own
property in common as well as individually, protected from some of the difficulties
of traditional common ownership. First-time homebuyers considering the Program
should think ahead about the types of problems that may arise as a result of
co-ownership, and consider how an alternative, such as transitioning to
condominium ownership after closing, might be a better option for added
protections down the road.
A member of REBA’s Condominium Law and
Practice Section, Bridget is an associate in the litigation and real estate departments of
the Quincy-based firm of Moriarty Bielan and Malloy LLC. Prior to joining MBM,
Bridget clerked for the Honorable Kevin T. Smith at the Land Court. She can be contacted at brose@mbmllc.com.