Gotta Vent...

Serious Business Backup 81 replies 1,087 views
Scarlet_Buckeye's avatar
Scarlet_Buckeye
Posts: 5,264
Feb 29, 2012 9:06am
Caveat emptor!
sherm03's avatar
sherm03
Posts: 7,349
Feb 29, 2012 9:12am
ZWICK 4 PREZ;1100045 wrote:This is going to sound like a dick, but this just part of home ownership. You bought the house 3 years ago and are just noticing it? There's no judge in the world who will agree with the disclosure in that time frame.
Well, it will be three years in May. As I said, we noticed the water problem a little over a year into owning the house. We just didn't know going back on the previous owner was even an option.
ZWICK 4 PREZ's avatar
ZWICK 4 PREZ
Posts: 7,733
Feb 29, 2012 9:16am
sherm03;1100129 wrote:Well, it will be three years in May. As I said, we noticed the water problem a little over a year into owning the house. We just didn't know going back on the previous owner was even an option.
Yeah but a judge is going to say

1. You bought the house 3 years ago, and are just now bringing it to attention.
2. You had a home inspector sign off that it was ok, therefore non-disclosure is out the door.
LJ's avatar
LJ
Posts: 16,351
Feb 29, 2012 9:21am
ZWICK 4 PREZ;1100132 wrote:Yeah but a judge is going to say

1. You bought the house 3 years ago, and are just now bringing it to attention.
2. You had a home inspector sign off that it was ok, therefore non-disclosure is out the door.
If they knew and didn't disclose it AND it took deconstruction to find the problem, he may have a case. Most of the time pre-sale inspections can't inspect anything that is not visible (take down walls, etc). If the contractors could identify the problem without tearing into anything, then yeah, Zwick would be 100% correct.