Homeowners: Let the seller beware ( 2003-08-28 09:05) (China Daily HK Edition)
Ever since developers in China started selling houses on the open market,
there have been homeowners wanting to protect their investments. Now, new
'homeowner rights groups' are growing in strength and sophistication, as China
Daily senior writer Raymond Zhou discovered.
Real-estate
salespeople receive potential customers before a poster in Beijing. Long
pushed in a disadvantageous position by developers, homeowners are
gradually rising to power in seeking justice by legal and rational means.
[newsphoto.com.cn]
"This is not a parade or a demonstration. It is an automobile group tour,"
explained the driver of the lead car of a 48-vehicle motorcade to the policeman
who stopped him.
The convoy, extending 500 metres, had departed from Fangzhouyuan, a
residential community along the Fourth Ring Road in northeastern Beijing, in the
early morning hours of July 4. Although there was no honking or flag waving,
each car window displayed a slogan: "Fangzhouyuan homeowners denounce evil
developers!"
Thousands of similar incidents take place nationwide regularly, pitting angry
homeowners against housing developers. While perhaps melodramatic, the
exhibition was nevertheless non-violent and resulted in a six-hour meeting
attended by municipal government officials who mediated in the conflict.
As the housing industry booms in China, the number of disputes between
homeowners and developers sky-rockets. According to the China Consumer's
Association, housing-related complaints and disputes have been growing at a
phenomenal annual rate for the last six years. In the first half of 2003, 9,900
disputes were recorded, a rise of 23.4 per cent over last year, of which 5,300
concerned quality, 1,300 had to do with contracts, 600 involved discrepancies in
measurements, 580 were over pricing and 500 targeted advertising.
Meanwhile, an additional 7,600 cases concerned home improvement matters, of
which 5,100 were about quality and 160 related to contracts. On top of that,
another 5,100 cases involved home remodelling issues and community housing
management.
"Housing is a durable good," analyzes An Xuehui, a professor with Tsinghua
University. "Some people may regard it as an investment, but how can you insure
its value if there are latent quality problems?"
Shifting foundations
Real-estate developers are known for a tendency to make claims they cannot
realistically fulfil. To expedite sales, they are apt to make grossly
exaggerated pitches. Many of their promises amount to little more than
illusions: the swimming pool on the blueprint, the Viennese garden in the
expensively produced commercial, the imported marble floors. Few, if any, such
amenities materialize once sales are closed and tenants move in.
A woman walks
past an advertisement for a villa campus at a real-estate fair in
Shanghai. Fancy amenities' failure to materialize have led to a bulk of
housing-related complaints and disputes.
In some of the more outrageous cases, facilities that actually do exist when
the buyers first inspect the housing units disappear over time. In several
instances, a housing complex comes with a beautifully landscaped park, complete
with rock formations and other artistic touches. But after construction of the
whole complex is finished and sold, usually a few years later, the homeowners
wake up one day to find their idyllic park gone - the space was either sold to
another developer for more housing or it turned out to be part of a thoroughfare
on a government drawing board.
"We bought into the concept of 'getting closer to nature', and we paid the
premiums accordingly. But we ended up living in a noisy, dusty environment,"
complained the owner of a home in Guangzhou's White Cloud Golf Park. The estate
included a 900-square-metre lawn as a major selling point, but it was leased by
the developer, as were the furniture and interior decorations gracing the demo
house.
Fangzhouyuan, the Beijing community that organized the July motorcade protest
over developers' deceptions, had planned for three more high-rises to be built
in the last phase of construction. But after tenants moved into the completed
units, the developer suddenly squeezed two additional buildings into the space.
"We felt like suckers. We were taken for a ride and became pawns in an
elaborate game devised by the developer," said one of the protesters.
However, the municipal official who acted as mediator had a different
opinion. "In this world, change is absolute. Stasis is relative," he said
philosophically.
The homeowners were not convinced. "We were not consulted on the revision. It
seems the developer can do anything to maximize his profits regardless of
professional ethics or legal obligations."
Structural flaws
If anything, the biggest "defect" lies in the imperfect legal system. Many
loopholes and flaws exist in the legal mechanisms that govern our housing
market, said Fang Lixin, professor of law at Zhejiang University in the city of
Hangzhou, where the housing market is white-hot. Consumers may know that they
are in the right but find it hard to get due compensation.
Homeowners
sometimes appeal to the media for help.
[newsphoto.com.cn]
For example, houses in China are usually priced by the square metre. But a
"shrinkage" factor that may include uninhabitable areas like walls or common
areas shared with neighbours often comes into play. Homeowners would have to
hire professionals to measure their units in order to determine whether they
have been cheated. But measurement agencies sometimes turn down individual
clients for fear of offending developers.
Even if the homeowner does win a lawsuit or dispute, the compensation is
usually insignificant. "I had saved (money for) much of my life for a unit with
a view. Even several thousand yuan in compensation is not going to remove the
building that has taken over the lawn and now blocks our view," said a
Fangzhouyuan homeowner named Zhao.
As a matter of fact, most compensation takes the form of waiving a year's
worth of management fees.
But matters took a dramatic turn in April, when a new court and legal
interpretation placed stringent limitations on developers, said Zhao Hangen, a
partner in the Guangzhou-based Everwin Law Firm. "It stipulates that a homeowner
can return the unit and get a full refund, plus interest, if one of the
following takes place: completion of the unit is three months behind schedule;
the developer cannot secure the ownership permit for the homeowners one year
after they move in; the floor space is more than 3 per cent smaller than it was
claimed to be. It is very pro-homeowner," Zhao told China Daily.
But Zhao did not know of any specific cases resolved in this way. "Legal
proceedings take time. There are a lot of cases in the pipeline. At least it
will make developers think twice before they engage in deceptive activities
again," Zhao explained.
Wild hogs
Homeowners call themselves "wild hogs", partly in self-mockery and partly for
the pun (both "homeowner" and "wild hog" are pronounced "ye zhu" in Chinese).
Measured in terms of purchasing power parity, China's housing market is
radically overpriced compared with Western countries. With such exorbitant
prices as 10,000 yuan (US$1,200) per square metre, a rate common in Beijing, one
would think the market attracts only the rich and the privileged.
Qin Bin, a lawyer with the Beijing Longan Law Firm, cites a community that
caters to the utmost elite, including judges, lawyers, movie stars, professors,
government officials and business executives. "One would think a pack of
homeowners like that would know how to protect their rights. But no, they are
just like the ordinary Joe - timid and helpless before the almighty developer,"
said Qin.
Given the oversupply of housing units in most Chinese cities, one would also
think home buyers were in a powerful position to demand quality and good
service. But the contrary is more often true. For all the complaints and
disputes, Chinese consumers rarely resort to legal means for resolution. "They
don't know how," said Gu Liaohai, deputy chairman of the China Behaviour Law
Association.
Traditionally non-confrontational and legally at a loss, they sometimes
appeal to the media for help. However, most of the country's influential urban
dailies generate substantial revenues from real-estate advertising. A few are
even directly controlled by the industry through clandestine investment.
A collapsed
building model at a sales office in Shanghai, where a dispute escalated
into physical confrontation. [newsphoto.com.cn]
When a Guangdong newspaper devoted a special section to homeowners' rights,
it clearly discouraged people from engaging in "contentious practices",
highlighting the high cost of lawsuits. And when a Beijing Times reporter
covered one such dispute in the Shiliuyuan community, he was beaten by an
unidentified attacker.
That leaves the homeowners, or "wild hogs", on their own. Most of them are
indeed not litigious, by nature or by necessity. Wu Jianzhong, a lawyer with the
Beijing Dacheng Law Firm, classifies them in several categories: (a) upmarket
buyers, who can be very intimidating or do not care about being cheated because
their source of income is murky at best; (b) investors, who are prudent and
calculating but never take risks when it comes to consumer rights; (c)
individuals or families purchasing homes for the long term; and, (d) people
being relocated due to city planning, who are usually at the bottom of the
social ladder and thus unable to afford the costs of consumer rights protection.
Only Category C, generally the well-educated middle class, have the sense and
means to fight the developers for their own financial interests. Sociologist
Yuan Yue estimates that only 5-10 per cent of homeowners would actively pursue
consumer rights, with about 30 per cent only willing to voice support, and the
rest, roughly 60 per cent, acting as bystanders.
"The leaders of homeowner advocates are often young people. Their passion
overrules ideological constraints. And they know how to use communication tools
like the Internet to organize and rally people," revealed Yuan Yue.
Yuan attributes the failure of most homeowner disputes to the
non-participation of the "silent majority". "They want a free ride. If the
activists succeed, every homeowner will get an equal share of the benefits; if
they fail, they are the only ones who sacrificed their time and energy."
But more and more homeowners are now spurning the wait-and-see mentality and
joining the fight. Some are uniting even before they become neighbours. When
buyers at Huaqingjiayuan were ready to close their sales, they did so together,
creating a "collective closure", forcing the developer to heed their warnings
about "shrinkage" and warning them about what would happen if the
120,000-square-metre lawn and recreation area should suddenly disappear. "The
developer can afford to lose one customer, but they cannot afford to lose all of
us," said one of the buyers.
Political awareness
The battle for homeowner rights has become a training ground for legal and
political participation. While some homeowners resort to marching outside the
sales office or even violence, either out of desperation or in an attempt to
attract attention, many others have turned to the slow-revolving wheels of
justice. The difference is, the more rational approach has led to the rise of
community leaders.
Yu Yafei is a PR executive in Beijing. When she first confronted the
development company about the less-than-accurate measurements of units in the
International Friendship Garden estate, the developer bet her that she would
never find an appraisal team willing to take on the job. After one year of hard
work, having collected a foot-high pile of documents and following a
well-polished, 20-minute presentation in court, she won "a partial victory",
which included an apology from the original appraisal agency and a refund from
the developer of the inflated charges for the exaggerated living space.
In Shenzhen, several homeowners who spearheaded crusades against "evil
developers" ended up running for office as people's representatives in local
districts. Some term themselves "sworn enemies" of the real-estate industry as
they vow to protect homeowners' rights from a legally reinforced position.
Wang Yanbing, leader of Atlantic New City, a Beijing community, summed up his
strategy: "Whatever we fight for has to be reasonable, since frivolous lawsuits
will only damage our cause; second, keep communication open to all homeowners;
third, find developer's weak points to effect breakthroughs; fourth, ensure that
all negotiations with the developer are open; and finally, get on close terms
with the government."
Meanwhile, developers are holding their ground. They feel they have powerful
friends on their side and label homeowner activists as "an unruly bunch with
ulterior motives". "We will never yield to their pressure," claimed Wang Zheng,
chairman of Beijing Rongfeng Real Estate Company. "We represent the majority of
honest homeowners. There are only a few troublemakers who are intent on creating
chaos for the whole community."