Quote:
Originally Posted by rsmurano
1 more thing, the concrete blocks are hollow and porous. How do you know you didn’t start filling up some of these blocks, or maybe you filled up these blocks before it started running over to the inside wall.
Your real estate agent is ignorant in saying everything is ok, no it’s not ok until you get the wall, insulation, drywall, carpet/pad dried out, inspected, and paid for by the seller. Then I would still walk.
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You would require a seller to spend money for an inspection and then still walk? That’s unethical.
In this case we still don’t know what the contract says. It is unclear what the seller is allowed to do for inspection issues. Most of us are used to seeing contracts that allow the buyers to walk for inspection issues. That is so often what happens. I’ve seen buyers get cold feet and walk using the inspection clause for really silly little fixes.
But it seems in this case the seller has the option to fix the issue. Not only that, regardless of people thinking “there’s no way to know it was fixed “, it certainly could have been a small amount of moisture from a broken sprinkler and the seller could have had it all fixed according to the contract. If so the buyer should fulfill the contract. I’m sorry but I have little empathy for people that don’t understand what they are signing. I do have empathy for the buyers husband situation. That sucks. But screwing the seller isn’t the answer.