Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#76
|
||
|
||
Quote:
I only knew of one other thread. I skipped to this thread when it was started and assumed everything not in the first thread was in this one. Apparently I missed a middle thread. Why is the OP starting multiple threads on the same subject? But you misunderstood what I was saying about the Seller. You don't know what the Seller is buying. Maybe the Seller of this house is buying a house from the Villages. Maybe a delay or cancelation of this contract means the Seller gets screwed on a different contract they have. Most real estate transactions have a cascade effect. I'm buying a house but I have to sell my current home to buy it. Person buying my current home is selling their current home to by mine. And so on. When deals fall apart a lot of people are usually getting screwed. ETA: Are you saying the owner died and the seller is someone else with POA or something? Okay I didn't have that info either. To say the seller doesn't stand to lose anything means you imply they don't have another transaction hinging on this one. If the inspector was that bad that is another whole issue on the buyer who hired them. The buyer should let the realtor know that the inspector sucks and don't recommend them. As far as the windows, which was definitely new info to me, the buyer should be able to back out on that alone. But again we don't know what the contract states so it's hard to tell. Quite simply this all comes down to the contract. Last edited by frayedends; 04-26-2024 at 05:14 PM. |
|
#77
|
||
|
||
Quote:
|
#78
|
||
|
||
Quote:
|
#79
|
||
|
||
^^^^^
Certainly there are bad inspectors. But I'm surprised a realtor would recommend them if they are that bad. After all, realtor needs a good reputation to be successful. The realtor I know recently saved a buyer inspection money simply because after a few minutes the inspector found big issues. She says to the buyer, "We can stop the inspection right now and save you some money if these issues are enough to make you back out." That way they don't pay for a 3 hour inspection if they found a bad roof or something in the first 5 minutes. But I agree, the OP needs a lawyer to at least look at the contract and see where she stands. |
Reply |
|
|
Thread Tools | |