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OMG! You Poor Lady!
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Susan, I hope you are keeping an ongoing written record of all the things that you have gone through with your house problems. I don't think a class action is what you need because your issues far exceed the norm of anyone else. I also don't think Morgan & Morgan is the one for you because your issues are not their specialty. I would hold off paying a tile expert that kind of money because, from the sound of what you are talking about, You very well might need more than a class-action suit. The "Covid finish" guy hasn't made an appointment with you since June and this is November and he still hasn't shown up? Sounds like B. S. to me. That's outrageous! Some years ago we had a problem also with our porcelain tile which was throughout the living area in our house (approximately 2,500 s.f.). The tile was done by Nickel Tile who one way or another, is related to the Morse family. We had nothing to do with him as the installer; he was Morse's go-to tile person and we had no choice. We had a number of areas where the lippage was so bad you could trip and kill yourself. We also had to pay for a tile expert to render his opinion in writing. Finally, after many back and forths, the problem was fixed. My opinion is that Morse said they wanted to rip out all three bathrooms at the same time because they knew it would be impossible for you to live like that. They were putting you off hoping you would drop the issue. Don't! Please check your private messages. |
same here. we were told it has to do with settling of the house/slab. our floorman said the same thing yours did & the issue was fixed promptly
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An odd situation ...
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Our inspection report showed poor pressure in one irrigation zone. We were unfamiliar with water billing; we had always lived with wells. I took the bill to Customer Service, where a clerk uttered the equivalent of 'Holy cow!' 'What? I asked. 'You used 33,000 gallons of water!' 'What should it be?' I asked. 'Maybe one-tenth of that....' We then discovered that an irrigation line ended abruptly underground, and it had never had a sprinkler head on it! Whenever that zone was on, it essentially ran like hose fully turned on, and the water disappeared into the sandy soil. Out of curiosity, we approached The Villages with the view that this was a construction defect. The Villages did not agree; the issue was not that we were the second owner but rather that the 'statute of limitations' on the sprinkler system was one MONTH, not the one YEAR that applies to most everything else. To us it was part of the adventure, not that big a deal. It did bring up some negative feelings in some persons on the fence about buying in TV and instead went elsewhere but still nearby. ToTV was fairly new then, but if it kept its archival material, this story should be somewhere in there.... |
This all seems like a plot, most if it has already been written, for a book. Not a good book…..just a book.
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One the most important thing before buy a home is location! Location! From what I have saw that needs to be addresses in these home locations.
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Need to be patient till area is built out and contractors pull out. We all had to put up with it!
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