Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#31
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The condensation is normally representative of argon gas being released from the pane. So definitely an insulation issue...not just cosmetic. See if the seller will meet you in the middle on replacement....small moral victory. If not, I agree with earlier post, on the overall purchase (assuming everything else is on the level), I wouldn’t walk away from the deal for a few hundred dollar fix |
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#32
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I have friends that asked me to look over their home the day before they closed. There was about $800-$1000 worth of items that were not fixed after the inspection a month prior. My friends were so p1ssed they were going to walk away instead of closing. Instead, the seller setup a pot of money that both parties agreed too to fix the items. The parties closed on the house the next day.
All of this should have been in the purchase agreement: based on the inspection, all items should be repaired before closing, at least that’s what I have put in the contract. I sold my last home on my own and I stated “as is”, I would not fix anything and I didn’t. The buyer still had it inspected to make sure if anything was found, the buyer would have to determine was it worth pursuing if the inspector found anything. Inspection was clean. |
#33
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#35
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Not only cosmetic
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Now if it's an older home, say 20 years and up it may be a somewhat fixer upper. Then I would just shrug it off. |
#36
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#37
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window problem
We had an issue on a silly item after the buyer wanted repairs not noted by their inspector. I balked - enough was enough. I said we didn't need to sell. The listing and selling agent split the cost.
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#40
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That is exactly why you should have a lawyer at the closing. Lots of little unexpected things can come up at closings and without a lawyer you are virtually helpless. I have had things like this happen many times at closings and without a lawyer I would’ve been on the losing end every time.
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#42
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Sold a house on the west coast. All windows had lost their air pocket and was noted in inspection. It was just an 15 year old window issue back then and maybe cosmetic only so the buyer just accepted that and other requests. The inspector originally marked down every little thing he saw so I had to give an explanation for each and the buyer still bought the house. Your realtor should be the expert for you.
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#43
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#44
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#45
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So - just an interesting aside about "losing your deposit" - when our home was up for sale up north, we had the same situation. A buyer wanted to pull out a couple weeks before closing, because it turned out he didn't qualify for the mortgage that he claimed he had pre-approved. We had the right to keep the deposit. But then their lawyer informed us that he would sue us for the deposit, which was in escrow. And we wouldn't be allowed to re-list the house for sale until the courts decided on the suit. So then WE had to decide if it was worth several months or even possibly years of paying mortgage on a home we no longer could afford to live in, because the deposit on a purchase was stuck in escrow - or if we'd just give the guy his deposit back and carry on with our lives.
So we ended up giving the guy his deposit back. We hated that. But if the potential buyer wants to play games, he COULD tie up the sale of the property with a lawsuit, even if he signed his right away when he made the offer. |
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