When Shel Greb—a
Los Angeles–based production designer for television commercials—and her husband
were looking to buy a second home, they looked first at properties in Cabo Puma,
Mexico, about an hour south of Cabo San Lucas. A developer had advertised roomy
lots on which the couple hoped to build a villa. It was tempting, except that
Greb has friends who had already tried to buy in that area, and they had spent
years fighting to get title to the land.
Mexico and much of Central and South America are under a legal
system called civil law, which places great emphasis on codification. No land
transfer takes place without the presence of a notario publico, a sort of cross between a lawyer and a judge, who charges thousands of
dollars to draw up deeds and make sure the buyers and sellers conform to the
letter of the written law. Individuals buying land also have to prove that the
title to it is clear, which is not always an easy task. In Mexico, the
government has given out lots of land as community property called
ejidos. (The ejido system originated during the period of
Aztec rule.) In order to purchase this land, the buyer must get the agreement of
at least two-thirds of the people living on it, a procedure that can take
years.
"It has been quite a learning process to figure out how to free
these lands from these owners," says Letvia Arza-Goderich, a real estate
attorney at Ballard Spahr Andrews & Ingersoll. Her firm employs more than
one specialist in ejido law. "It can take 10 to 12 years to go through the
process of buying the land, or it can be done in as quickly as five years.
Still, buyers and developers must be aware of these issues before they set
unrealistic projections around when they can build on a property," she says. In
some countries, such as Honduras and Costa Rica, the law recognizes squatter’s
rights, which means that land that seems unused can be claimed by someone else.
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