Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#16
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I hope that the OP comes back and tells us. I WAS trying to be a little funny.
![]() I am sure that if it is a tree belonging to The Villages, they will be ready to fix things. Everything else runs smoothly. I also was trying to get a little more information. We can go from zero to sixty here in a few seconds. Yes I have had only good experiences here and it colors my opinions. So perhaps the OP will tell us just what happened, since he/she brought it up to begin with.
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It is better to laugh than to cry. |
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#17
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Check with your homeowner's insurance agent. I think you will find that the rule is if your tree falls on your neighbor's house HIS insurance pays for the damage and vice versa.
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#18
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Pittels hasn't logged on since his original post. Perhaps when he checks in, he will clarify how he knows that a tree belonging to The Villages is the culprit. In the meantime, I assume it's hot in TV, so I hope Pittels was able to get the air conditioner fixed.
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Barefoot At Last No act of kindness, no matter how small, is ever wasted. Saving one dog will not change the world, but surely for that one dog, the world will change forever. |
#19
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#20
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#21
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Call Sam.
The District Property Management Department is responsible for upholding the aesthetic, physical and environmental assets of the District by maintaining the District’s physical assets and infrastructure. Sam Wartinbee, Director sam.wartinbee@districtgov.org Dave Burgess, Assistant Director dave.burgess@districtgov.org Contact Us Main Office 3231 Wedgewood Lane The Villages, FL 32162 Phone: 352-753-4022 Fax: 352-753-4296 Key Largo Office 1135 Bonita Boulevard The Villages, FL 32162 Phone: 352-751-6713 Fax: 352-750-8219 |
#22
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September 2011 Tree Limb falls on golf carts on Heron golf course.
Close call on Heron I recently was paired with one of the owners who told me about this, and told me that the Villages paid ZERO dollars for the damages, Act of God exemption. Could be I was told a tall tale, or not. Clearly in the Heron case, Villages owned tree, Villages maintained tree, on a path TV makes you use on their course and a tree their employees (ambassadors) have the opportunity to assess regularly for damage or weakness. If all those circumstances are not enough to create liability then I wouldn't count on liability for your AC unless you had previously complained about a dangerous situation to TV and they failed to act.
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Men plug the dikes of their most needed beliefs with whatever mud they can find. - Clifford Geertz |
#23
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Some of the things I have been told as an absolute fact here in The Villages, weren't. Sweetie comes home with "valid" information from his golf partners that turns out to be hearsay and repeated gossip. Contractors and subcontractors have repeated to me things that were not the truth but they believed them to be so. There is a bunch of folks who dislike the developer that believe, and want to believe all negatives said about him. I don't think that is you Blueash. But I am just as culpable as to believe the Morses et al will not step back from paying if it was their tree..... But they won't if someone is trying to squeeze some bucks from them because they have a lot of them. When we moved into our new home we bought a new clothes dryer and it was delivered and the delivery person knocked a big chunk out of the concrete stoop at the front door. I called warranty, telling them that it was not their responsibility but I wanted to hire the concrete person and painter to repair the damage done by our "agent". I told them, yet they came out and repaired and painted the stoop and did not charge us. I don't see the developers as shady or unscrupulous. But I don't see them as stupid either. And sometimes folks you meet casually misrepresent themselves. When we were building our new home we visited each evening and ran into many people walking through our home under construction who told us that our house was their house. We complemented them on their good taste.
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It is better to laugh than to cry. |
#24
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In my neck of the woods, if the limb is over the property line then a home owner has the right/responsibilty to trim that portion of the tree. So if a dead limb overhanging your property breaks off, then you own the consequences.
If the tree falls over that is another matter, however I would go to my insurance company for coverage. It would be up to them to deal with the neighbor's insurance company.
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T-325 |
#25
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We don't know any of the particulars because the OP has posted and has not returned and clarified.
I am hoping for the best, as usual.
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It is better to laugh than to cry. |
#26
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![]() Lots of interesting theories and advice based on speculation. But it is difficult to give helpful advice without the facts.
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Collegeville, PA - Bellingham, MA - Royersford, PA - Downingtown, PA - Wellington, FL - The Villages (Collier) |
#27
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YOu may be right but usually you have to file with your insurance co, then they go after the other party.
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#28
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We lived in Georgia with very large trees in all of the yards. If a neighbors tree fell on your house, your insurance paid. I know it seems unfair but that is the way it worked. The only way your neighbor paid was if you had made an official complaint to the other property owner that you felt their tree was a danger. This had to be documented by something such as a certified letter.
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#29
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superstorm sandy dropped a neighbors tree onto our sons car, which was parked in our driveway, and crushed the rood and the hood which totalled the car. unfortunately only auto insurance would cover those sort of damages, and since the car was only worth about 1000.00 insurance for that amount would not have been practical so needless to say the entire car was a loss. even though the neighbors tree caused all the damage he was not liable for anything, including removal of any part of the tree that was not on his property. a good neighbor would at least offer something as compensation; but that did not happen.
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#30
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Closed Thread |
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