September 20, 2007

   
LOGIN | SUBSCRIBE | GUIDEBOOKS | ARCHIVE SEARCH | CONTACT US |
| Home
| Top Story
| Business & Real Estate
| Weekend Section spaces>
| The Nica Times
| Daily News
| Letters to the Editor
| Photo Galleries>
| Classified Ads >
| Exchange Rates
Central Bank
Reference Rate

BUY 516.38 SELL 520.70

In the Works: Construction workers yesterday continued drilling away on a pedestrian walkway along downtown San José's Ave. 4, one of the city's improvement projects under way that's contributed to traffic jams this week.

Christopher Huber | Tico Times
| Previous Daily News
| Monday | Tuesday
| Wednesday | Thursday
| Friday

Looking Back in Time: This photograph is part of an exhibit of photos taken from 1880 to 1930 on display through Nov. 24 at the Sophia Wanamaker Gallery inside the Costa Rican-North American Cultural Center in San José's Barrio Dent. For more information, call 207-7554 or 207-7567.

Photo courtesy of Costa Rican-North American Cultural Center

CAFTA Laws Take Center Stage
Declarations by legislators and the Executive Branch yesterday made clear that the fight over the Central American Free-Trade Agreement with the United States (CAFTA) will not end with the national referendum Oct. 7.
See More...
Costa Rican Legislature Examines Bill to Prohibit Gays from Adopting
A bill that would prohibit gays from adopting children was unanimously approved by the Legislative Assembly's Childhood and Adolescence Commission yesterday and will now be placed on the assembly's agenda for debate on the main floor.
See More...
Green Alert Declared for Pacific Coast And Central Valley
Communities around Costa Rica are being pounded by a tropical storm that has caused several rivers to overflow, according to the National Emergency Commission (CNE), which yesterday declared a green, preventive alert for the Pacific coast and Central Valley.
Tamarindo Police Operation Brings in Weapons, Drugs, Motorcycles
More than 100 Judicial Investigation Police (OIJ) swept into the northwestern beach town of Tamarindo yesterday to look for illegal immigrants and weapons, according to an OIJ statement.
Foundation Donates $1 Million to Protect Costa Rican Forests
The U.S. foundation Pax Natura yesterday donated $1 million to the Costa Rican government to create a program to protect 12,000 hectares of forests during the next 10 years, according to a statement from Casa Presidencial.

Real Estate Theft:
Risk Low, but Real

The issue of real estate theft has been occupying headlines for several years in Costa Rica. Though the fear of losing your land cannot be considered unfounded in the face of this reality, it is important to state that these cases constitute a very small percentage in the whole.

 


CAFTA Laws Take Center Stage

By Gillian Gillers
Tico Times Staff | ggillers@ticotimes.net

Declarations by legislators and the Executive Branch yesterday made clear that the fight over the Central American Free-Trade Agreement with the United States (CAFTA) will not end with the national referendum Oct. 7.

At issue is the CAFTA implementation agenda – a set of 13 laws crawling through the Legislative Assembly – which would allow the free-trade pact to go into effect. Citizen Action Party (PAC) faction head Elizabeth Fonseca has declared that even if voters pass CAFTA, the party will use all the tools in its power to keep the assembly from approving the implementation agenda.

The agenda includes some of the most controversial aspects of the trade pact, such as taking monopolies away from the state-run Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE) and National Insurance Institute (INS).

Citizen Action “is ignoring the will of the Costa Rican people,” Presidency Minister Rodrigo Arias said in a press conference yesterday after the President's weekly Cabinet meeting. “They are making a mockery of Costa Ricans.”

Arias, who is the President's brother, said if voters reject the treaty, the Executive Branch would drop its push for opening in the telecommunications and insurance industries.

Fonseca said blocking the agenda after a “yes” vote “is not disrespectful at all” because the Executive Branch and the Supreme Elections Tribunal have treated the implementation agenda as separate from CAFTA.

Rodrigo Arias maintains that given a “yes” vote Oct. 7, the implementation agenda would have to be approved before a Feb. 29, 2008 deadline for the free-trade treaty to go into effect. Some legislative advisors have said Costa Rica could request an extension of the deadline.

Still, Rodrigo Arias remains “optimistic” that the agenda can be passed within the nearly five-month time frame. The “extraordinary session” during December could be one tool to push the 13 laws, Arias said. During such sessions, the Executive Branch has the power to define the legislative agenda.

See this Friday's print or electronic edition of The Tico Times for more CAFTA news.


Costa Rican Legislature Examines
Bill to Prohibit Gays from Adopting

By Amanda Roberson
Tico Times Staff | aroberson@ticotimes.net

A bill that would prohibit gays from adopting children was unanimously approved by the Legislative Assembly's Childhood and Adolescence Commission yesterday and will now be placed on the assembly's agenda for debate on the main floor.

The law proposes reforming article 107 of Costa Rica's Family Code by adding a paragraph banning “adoptions, made by title to an individual or pair, in which one or both people have shown a sexual orientation toward people of the same sex,” according to a statement from the Libertarian Movement Party.

Now that the bill has been approved by a legislative commission, it will be added to the assembly's agenda to move to the main floor for debate, explained Legislative Assembly spokesman Juan Carlos Jiménez. It will automatically get added to the end of the agenda, which is 200-plus bills long, unless a legislator makes a motion to bump it up.

Mario Núñez, a Libertarian Movement legislator and president of the Childhood and Adolescents Commission, praised the bill.

“Members of this commission are committed to the emotional, psychological, social and material well-being of minors, which is why, going beyond the desires of a social minority, we should legislate thinking only of the superior interest of the child,” he said. “The state should make sure that minors in this condition are given to families whose base is heterosexual monogamous matrimony, as is established in our Constitution, Family Code and Christian principles.”

Abelardo Araya -- president of the Diversity Movement, a gay, bisexual and transgender activist -- strongly disagreed.

The commission's arguments are totally stereotypical,” he said. “Sexual orientation has nothing to do with whether or not one is fit to take care of a child.”

The bill shows a “retrocession of human rights in Costa Rica,” he said. “It's highly discriminatory. From the outside, Costa Rica seems like a country where human rights are respected, but in reality there are acts of systematic discrimination happening every day. It's an embarrassment.”


Green Alert Declared for
Pacific Coast And Central Valley

Communities around Costa Rica are being pounded by a tropical storm that has caused several rivers to overflow, according to the National Emergency Commission (CNE), which yesterday declared a green, preventive alert for the Pacific coast and Central Valley.

The National Meteorological Institute (IMN) yesterday predicted more strong rains to pass over the region last night.

Yesterday, heavy rains began to fall over the northwestern Guanacaste province, flooding houses in Tilarán and Santa Isabel Arriba. Also, 15 families were preventively evacuated from their homes Tuesday night when heavy rains threatened to cause Cañas River to overflow.

These torrential rains continued all day yesterday, causing damage in the cantons of Carrillo, Santa Cruz and Nicoya.

-Tico Times


Tamarindo Police Operation Brings
in Weapons, Drugs, Motorcycles

More than 100 Judicial Investigation Police (OIJ) swept into the northwestern beach town of Tamarindo yesterday to look for illegal immigrants and weapons, according to an OIJ statement.

From 9 a.m. until 2 p.m., these officers, together with National Police, Immigration officials and Traffic Police, stopped cars to check passengers' identification.

They arrested six people who failed to produce identification: one Panamanian and five Nicaraguans, and also seized three motorcycles of “doubtful origin,” three unlicensed guns and small amounts of drugs.

-Tico Times


Foundation Donates $1 Million
to Protect Costa Rican Forests

The U.S. foundation Pax Natura yesterday donated $1 million to the Costa Rican government to create a program to protect 12,000 hectares of forests during the next 10 years, according to a statement from Casa Presidencial.

An agreement signed by President Oscar Arias, Environment and Energy Minister Roberto Dobles and Pax Natura representative Randall Tolpinrud will put this money toward Costa Rica's Payment for Environmental Services program, which pays landowners who preserve forestlands.

-Tico Times


Real Estate Theft: Risk Low, but Real

The issue of real estate theft has been occupying headlines for several years in Costa Rica. Though the fear of losing your land cannot be considered unfounded in the face of this reality, it is important to state that these cases constitute a very small percentage in the whole.

Of course, if you narrow it down by category, such as land owned by foreign citizens – especially if the land has seen no movement for a long period of time – the odds are higher, but, in my opinion, still not so high as to justify ruling out investing in real estate in Costa Rica.

What real estate owners and purchasers need to know is that the risk exists and, though low in probability, has to be taken seriously, as do the measures to protect yourself.

If you already own property in Costa Rica, you should check that ownership was recorded properly and that it remains so. An attorney can easily verify this.

After this step has been completed, and assuming everything is in order, it is recommendable to periodically check the property section of the National Registry, which is available online at www.registronacional.go.cr, and confirm that there have been no transfers – registered or filed – on your land.

The attorney that performed the initial search can easily explain how to perform this verification and what to look for (mainly, the ownership and the annotations lines on the online report). Although the site is in Spanish only, once you know what you are doing and what you are looking for, it should be an easy task.

In addition to the services of an attorney, landowners have a new option to protect themselves against property fraud. The recently launched Private Property Registry carries out nightly checks of National Registry activity for its customers, notifies them immediately of requests for changes and can dispute registry changes on behalf of its clients (TT, Aug. 31).

If you have become the unfortunate victim of land theft, all is not lost. The biggest problem in such cases is that in most situations there are at least two parties who acted in good faith and got involved in real estate transactions trusting the country's property system and National Registry: the original owner (in this case, the one who suffered the theft) who held his land under a system he or she considered safe, and the current owner, who purchased based on title searches that determined the true ownership of the seller.

The above situation puts the court authorities that rule on this type of case in a controversial situation: which of the two parties should be favored? The answer is not always consistent, and case law has been conflictive with regard to this subject, though it generally leans toward protection of the original owner, especially in criminal courts.

What is clear is that the state and its property registration system have shown to be vulnerable in these cases and, theoretically, the losing party should be able to sue the state for damages resulting from flaws in the system.

The good news is that in these cases the fraudulent actions of the criminals stealing property are usually documented and even recorded as public documents. This makes it somewhat easier to obtain evidence and prove that one has been the victim of fraud. Of course, not all cases are the same, but this is what usually happens.

For a landowner who has suffered property theft, there are many mechanisms that can be put into action that in most cases are more effective the sooner the problem has been detected.

National Registry annotations and property freezes are the first line of action, and are usually a quick way to stop further movements on the land. However, these are only precautionary measures to avoid further damages to the victim and to third parties, as well as to secure the property; to recover the property, criminal and civil filings are necessary.

If you are not yet a landowner but are considering purchasing a piece of land, a thorough title search should be sufficient to rule out the most common forms of property fraud.

Your search, in addition to typical title-search items such as ownership, liens, encumbrances and characteristics of the land, should include special attention to the historical patterns on the piece of land in question, specifically a chain of property transfers and/ or securities, or a combination thereof, often within a short period of time and not necessarily recent, starting with the title being transferred or in some other form compromised by a foreign party or foreign-controlled company. This type of pattern is usually put in place by the perpetrators to create a situation in which the fraud is diluted within the chain, ending up with a good-faith party.

This is not to say that all historical transactions following the abovementioned pattern are fraudulent, but a red flag must be raised and further confirmations must be made if such a pattern is found.

In conclusion, the issue of property theft in Costa Rica should not be a deterrent to purchasing real estate. Though no one can deny it occurs, statistically it does not affect a significant number of properties. Nevertheless, both landowners and prospective purchasers must be aware of the situation and take specific actions to reduce their exposure to risk.

For more legal advice, contact Lang & Asociados at 204-7871 or visit www.langcr.com.

Costa Rica dentist, health, teeth whitening, crowns, dental implants, bleaching, crowns, permanent make-up
Tico Times, Costa Rica, travel guide, guidebook, beaches, rainforests, hotels, activities, restaurants
Costa Rica gated community, Costa Rican real estate, Santa Ana, living in Costa Rica, moving to Costa Rica
 
a
RETURN TO THE TOP OF PAGE

HOME | SUBSCRIBE | ADVERTISE | GUIDEBOOKS | BACK ISSUES | ARCHIVE SEARCH | CONTACT US | ABOUT US | NEWSSTANDS | LINKS