PODCAST · education
The Dispute Desk
by The Dispute Desk
The Dispute Desk is an educational podcast dedicated to the discussion of disputes within Dubai's real estate sector. It focuses on the various kinds of disputes or disagreements that may arise between stakeholders and how to navigate them. Topics include developer arrears, broker misrepresentation and disappearance. Please note nothing on the podcasts constitutes legal advice and in fact the entire desk is dedicated to pre-legal matters only. We aim to give our audience educational advice and observations on how to navigate commonly surfacing issues.
-
2
EPISODE 04
SPA CANCELLATION – THE REALISTIC OUTCOMES Episode 04 – dispute.ae PodcastWelcome back to the dispute.ae podcast. I'm Paul.In this episode, we're discussing one of the most common questions in Dubai's off-plan property market: What happens if a buyer wants to cancel a Sale and Purchase Agreement (SPA)?The answer depends entirely on why the buyer wants to exit.An SPA Is a Binding ContractAn SPA is the agreement that governs an off-plan property purchase. It sets out the buyer's payment obligations and the developer's commitment to build and deliver the property.Many buyers assume that wanting to leave the deal is enough. Legally, it is not.The real question is not whether a buyer wants to cancel, but on what legal basis the cancellation is being sought and what consequences follow.Two Different PathsThere are generally two routes to SPA cancellation, and they lead to very different outcomes.1. Developer BreachThe stronger position arises when the developer has failed to meet its contractual obligations.The most common example is substantial project delay. Depending on the contract terms, project status, and surrounding circumstances, a buyer may have grounds to seek cancellation and pursue a refund.However, delay alone does not automatically guarantee a full refund. Contractual extensions, force majeure provisions, regulatory intervention, and the buyer's own compliance with payment obligations can all affect the outcome.2. Buyer DefaultThe second route occurs when the developer has not breached the agreement, but the buyer wants to exit due to financial difficulties, market changes, or a change of plans.In these situations, the law generally gives developers certain rights to retain part of the amounts already paid, subject to the applicable legal framework and project status.As a result, exiting the SPA can become costly and may involve a partial recovery rather than a full refund.Understanding Realistic OutcomesThe outcome of an SPA cancellation is rarely all-or-nothing.Where a genuine developer breach exists, the possible outcomes may range from a negotiated settlement and substantial refund to a partial recovery depending on the facts.Where the buyer is in default, the outcome often involves some level of financial loss, although negotiation may sometimes improve the position.What is rarely realistic is a simple full refund merely because the buyer no longer wishes to proceed.The Role of Pre-Legal ResolutionThis is where pre-legal dispute work becomes valuable.A clear assessment of the contract, project status, legal position, and available leverage helps buyers understand the realistic range of outcomes before making decisions.Strong documentation, effective communication, and informed negotiation can often improve the result, even where a dispute cannot be avoided.Key TakeawaySPA cancellation is not simply a matter of changing your mind.The legal basis for cancellation determines the available remedies, the potential refund, and the overall outcome.Understanding whether the issue is developer breach or buyer default is often the first and most important step toward achieving a realistic resolution.In the next episode, we'll examine Article 11 of Law No. 19 of 2017 and the rules governing the termination of off-plan property agreements in Dubai.Source:
-
1
EPISODE 03
THE ROLE OF A LIAISON DESK IN A PROPERTY DISPUTE Episode 03 – dispute.ae PodcastWelcome back to the dispute.ae podcast. I'm Paul.In our previous episodes, we explored the pre-legal dispute space and where its boundaries lie. Today, we're looking at one of the key mechanisms that operates within that space: the liaison desk.Why a Liaison Desk ExistsWhen an individual buyer enters a dispute with a developer, there is often a significant imbalance. The issue is not necessarily who is right or wrong. The challenge is that developers typically have experienced contracts teams, established procedures, and extensive knowledge of dispute resolution.An individual buyer, on the other hand, is usually dealing with the process for the first time while also managing work, family, and other commitments.A liaison desk exists to help reduce that imbalance.What a Liaison Desk DoesA liaison desk brings structure and professional coordination to the pre-legal stage of a dispute.The process begins with reviewing the contract, supporting documents, and relevant legal framework to understand the buyer's actual position.From there, the desk helps:Assess the strengths and weaknesses of the caseIdentify realistic outcomesHighlight available leverage and optionsManage communication with the developerProvide practical recommendations at each stageRather than relying on emotional exchanges, the dispute is handled through a structured and documented process.The Real ValueOne of the most important effects of a liaison desk is changing how the other side views the dispute.Instead of dealing with a single frustrated buyer, the developer is dealing with an organised process that understands the documentation, the legal position, and the available next steps.This often encourages more meaningful engagement and productive discussions.Understanding the LimitsA liaison desk is not a magic solution.It cannot change the law, force a settlement, guarantee a result, or replace formal legal proceedings when litigation becomes necessary.An honest liaison process should also identify weak cases early rather than encouraging unnecessary costs.How the Process Usually WorksMost liaison services operate in stages.The first stage is an assessment of the contract, facts, and legal position. If the dispute has merit, the process moves into active engagement with the counterparty.If a resolution cannot be achieved, the buyer should still leave with a clear understanding of their position, supporting documentation, and a realistic view of what formal proceedings may involve.Key TakeawayA liaison desk exists to reduce the gap between an experienced developer and an individual buyer by bringing structure, strategy, and professional coordination to the dispute process.Its purpose is not to guarantee an outcome, but to ensure the dispute is approached in an informed, organised, and realistic manner.In the next episode, we'll explore one of the most common off-plan property issues: SPA cancellation and the realistic options available when a buyer wants to exit a Sale and Purchase Agreement.Source:
-
0
EPISODE 02
Here’s a tightened version under 2000 characters while keeping the core message and tone intact:Welcome back to the dispute.ae podcast. I’m Paul. This is episode two.In the first episode we established that most disputes are resolved in the pre-legal space. This episode is about the boundary of that space — when a dispute is still practically negotiable, and when it has crossed into territory where formal proceedings are likely unavoidable.Most people misunderstand where that boundary sits.It is not the moment lawyers become involved. Lawyers operate extensively in the pre-legal stage through negotiation, settlement drafting, and strategic advice.It is also not the moment a dispute becomes hostile. Parties can be deeply adversarial and still remain in the pre-legal phase.The true formal boundary is procedural: once a claim is filed before a court or binding tribunal, the matter becomes legal. Control shifts from the parties to the court.But the more useful question is practical:Is the resolution still in the parties’ hands?A dispute remains pre-legal while the parties can still realistically negotiate and reach an agreement themselves. It crosses the boundary when that becomes unlikely or impossible.That usually happens for four reasons.First, the counterparty only responds to filed claims. Some developers or large counterparties simply ignore pre-legal pressure until formal proceedings begin.Second, a limitation deadline is approaching. Once the filing window closes, leverage can disappear entirely.Third, the remedy required is something only a court can provide — such as an injunction, enforcement order, or binding declaration of rights.Fourth, working trust has collapsed completely. Pre-legal resolution requires at least minimal confidence that an agreement will actually be honoured.But the reverse mistake is equally expensive: escalating too early. Filing a claim too soon can destroy flexibility, increase costs, and harden positions in disputes that could have been resolved privately.The key judgment is recognising whether resolution still sits with the parties — or whether it has already moved beyond them.In the next episode we look at the liaison desk itself: what it does, how it operates between buyers and developers, and why structured pre-legal management matters.Thanks for listening. Full transcripts are available at transcript.ae. For pre-legal dispute support, visit dispute.ae.
-
-1
EPISODE 01
Welcome to the dispute.ae podcast. Over the next ten episodes, we’ll explore property disputes in the UAE — how they begin, how they escalate, and the options available before formal court proceedings become necessary.This first episode focuses on a concept many people misunderstand: pre-legal dispute resolution.Most people think disputes exist in only two stages — either there is a problem, or there is a court case. In reality, there is an important space between those two stages, and that is where most property disputes are actually resolved.Pre-legal dispute resolution is the structured process of resolving disputes before formal litigation begins. It does not mean the law is irrelevant, and it does not mean lawyers are absent. It simply means the dispute has not yet been formally handed to a court or tribunal for a binding decision.This stage exists because litigation is rarely the best first option.Court proceedings are often slow, expensive, uncertain, and damaging to ongoing relationships. A dispute involving a developer, landlord, seller, or broker can take months — sometimes years — before a final outcome is reached.Because of that, many parties prefer to resolve matters earlier through negotiation, structured communication, regulatory escalation, or strategic pre-legal engagement.But pre-legal resolution is not just sending complaints or angry emails. A proper pre-legal strategy is built on structure and preparation.A strong pre-legal position usually requires:• Understanding the legal position• Reviewing the evidence and documents• Assessing realistic outcomes• Identifying leverage points• Managing communication strategicallyThis is where liaison desks and dispute support services become important. Most developers, brokers, and counterparties handle disputes regularly. Most buyers or investors are facing the process for the first time. Professional support helps correct that imbalance.Pre-legal resolution is also not always the correct path. Some disputes require immediate court action, while others may not be commercially sensible to pursue at all. A proper dispute process should tell you honestly when escalation is necessary — and when walking away may be the smarter decision.The key point is this:The space between a problem and a courtroom is not empty. It is where most disputes are negotiated, managed, and resolved.In the next episode, we’ll explore where the line sits between a pre-legal dispute and a matter that requires formal proceedings.I’m Paul. Thanks for joining us at dispute.ae.
We're indexing this podcast's transcripts for the first time — this can take a minute or two. We'll show results as soon as they're ready.
No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.
No topics indexed yet for this podcast.
Loading reviews...
ABOUT THIS SHOW
The Dispute Desk is an educational podcast dedicated to the discussion of disputes within Dubai's real estate sector. It focuses on the various kinds of disputes or disagreements that may arise between stakeholders and how to navigate them. Topics include developer arrears, broker misrepresentation and disappearance. Please note nothing on the podcasts constitutes legal advice and in fact the entire desk is dedicated to pre-legal matters only. We aim to give our audience educational advice and observations on how to navigate commonly surfacing issues.
HOSTED BY
The Dispute Desk
Loading similar podcasts...