
Scarlet_Buckeye
Posts: 5,264
Feb 29, 2012 9:06am
Caveat emptor!

sherm03
Posts: 7,349
Feb 29, 2012 9:12am
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;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.

ZWICK 4 PREZ
Posts: 7,733
Feb 29, 2012 9:16am
Yeah but a judge is going to saysherm03;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.
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
Posts: 16,351
Feb 29, 2012 9:21am
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.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.