Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I would sue that sound like you have more than enough evidence.
Did you pick the inspector or did your realtor?
I picked the inspector but could not physically attend the inspection due to work so my realtor did.
You bought a 1920 house and did not go to the inspection?
This has to be your first home.
Even if I attended the inspection it would have made no difference as I would not be able to physically go with them under a crawl space. They provided a picture of new pex pipe which unfortunately only goes to a small section of a later bathroom addition.
In other words, the only pipes accessible to the inspector were replaced. The inspector can't tear up the walls to look at pipes.
No case, OP.
You seem to have a reading comprehension issue. The pipes that were accessible under the crawlspace with the exception of a new bathroom addition were all original galvanized pipes. The inspector was either incompetent or more likely reported that all pipes were new to get the sale to close. You can't even get proper home insurance on homes with old galvanized pipes if you report the home's condition honestly and will be dropped if they find out.
Everything you say is wrong and you're an ass hole.
Clearly you are a very wise and mature person.
The claim that "you can't even get proper home insurance on homes with old galvanized pipes" is patently false. Half the homes inside the beltway have galvanized pipes. So yah, I'll call out bull shit.