Anonymous wrote:That sucks. It should have been found in inspection but doesn't always happen. It is now your problem.
Anonymous wrote:I was just surprised this was not a part of the escrow search
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We bought a house back in Jan. While trying to replace our roof this week, the roofing company called and said they can't start work because there are outstanding permits on the house and rejected our current permit! Now I have to call the office to see what's up, but waiting for more details.
Questions on what I can do:
1) would I need to reach out to seller/agent on seeing how this can get remedied if there's costs associated? Is this a lawsuit issue?
2) Shouldn't the escrow company have done some digging to find this?!
Soooo annoyed!
That’s so weird roofing company checking on house permit ?
Why they care the if they only dealing with roof , it’s not like open permit equites to lean .
Do you have a lean on the property, maybe they worry you don’t pay your bills?
No, we hired roofers to redo the roof. They rejected their permit request and sent back a list of 3 open permits that never closed. We can't proceed with the new permit on the roof till that's been sorted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We bought a house back in Jan. While trying to replace our roof this week, the roofing company called and said they can't start work because there are outstanding permits on the house and rejected our current permit! Now I have to call the office to see what's up, but waiting for more details.
Questions on what I can do:
1) would I need to reach out to seller/agent on seeing how this can get remedied if there's costs associated? Is this a lawsuit issue?
2) Shouldn't the escrow company have done some digging to find this?!
Soooo annoyed!
That’s so weird roofing company checking on house permit ?
Why they care the if they only dealing with roof , it’s not like open permit equites to lean .
Do you have a lean on the property, maybe they worry you don’t pay your bills?
Anonymous wrote:We bought a house back in Jan. While trying to replace our roof this week, the roofing company called and said they can't start work because there are outstanding permits on the house and rejected our current permit! Now I have to call the office to see what's up, but waiting for more details.
Questions on what I can do:
1) would I need to reach out to seller/agent on seeing how this can get remedied if there's costs associated? Is this a lawsuit issue?
2) Shouldn't the escrow company have done some digging to find this?!
Soooo annoyed!
Anonymous wrote:You can definitely sue. They are in fact liable
Anonymous wrote:This usually just involves closing out the permit by having the inspector come out, which in my experience is very easy. Yes, you may need to replace some drywall, who knows. No, you won't be suing anyone.