Anonymous wrote:Are you really as stupid as you come across? OP has said nothing about whether there are any addenda. The question was narrowly phrased.
You may have done this for two decades but you don't have a clue about contracts. You made an assumption which may or may not be correct. I feel sorry for the clients you represent but hopefully there aren't too many of those. You really are a cretin for offering an opinion without all the facts.
Like I said it is agents like you that give the industry a bad reputation.
BTW, did you even finish high school?
Anonymous wrote:^^ Another clueless agent offering legal advice without even seeing the contract. Is it any wonder that agents are viewed so negatively by most people who interact with them?
OP, I have no idea what your circumstances are since you have shared only limited information but this jackass does not know his ass from his elbow. But I agree with the PP who said pushing the envelope has risks and will not make for an amicable closing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I am being a PITA because I say that I want to comply with the contract - nothing more and nothing less?
Because you want to push the envelope as far as you possibly can. You want to have your belongings in the house until the very last minute. It's a recipe for disaster.
When the buyers do the final walk through, and if everything is a mess, they can ask for an amount to be held back in escrow to cover any cleaning expenses or necessary repairs which are not visible due to the house being a mess.
Anonymous wrote:You are being a PITA because you're not giving us all of the info. WHAT IS THE ISSUE???
Anonymous wrote:
I am being a PITA because I say that I want to comply with the contract - nothing more and nothing less?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't the buyers get a last minute walk through prior to closing? If your crap is still in the house and, for whatever reason, they miss something that they would've otherwise noticed in a vacant house, that could be a problem.
I wanted the sellers out that day. We had shit to do and were planning on sleeping in the new house that night to get started early.
Does the buyer have a right to a walk-thru in a vacant house? We merely want to comply with the requirements in the contract.
Just as a PP said we have to vacate in accordance with the contract we also don't need to do any more than the contract calls for.
No, there's no requirement that the house be vacant at that time. I'm just saying that if you have a shelving unit or something that blocks a major water stain (that shows you had a leaking toilet last month) and then, after the buyer moves in, that stain not only becomes horribly noticeable, but also, the toilet starts leaking again (because, as the seller, you picked a day laborer to fix it the first time). Then the buyer could claim that you willingly hid that evidence by failing to get your shit out of there.
You're the one who sounds like a PITA OP. Why not just call the day prior to your actual closing the "closing date" and move your stuff?!!?!
This. Exactly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't the buyers get a last minute walk through prior to closing? If your crap is still in the house and, for whatever reason, they miss something that they would've otherwise noticed in a vacant house, that could be a problem.
I wanted the sellers out that day. We had shit to do and were planning on sleeping in the new house that night to get started early.
Does the buyer have a right to a walk-thru in a vacant house? We merely want to comply with the requirements in the contract.
Just as a PP said we have to vacate in accordance with the contract we also don't need to do any more than the contract calls for.
No, there's no requirement that the house be vacant at that time. I'm just saying that if you have a shelving unit or something that blocks a major water stain (that shows you had a leaking toilet last month) and then, after the buyer moves in, that stain not only becomes horribly noticeable, but also, the toilet starts leaking again (because, as the seller, you picked a day laborer to fix it the first time). Then the buyer could claim that you willingly hid that evidence by failing to get your shit out of there.
You're the one who sounds like a PITA OP. Why not just call the day prior to your actual closing the "closing date" and move your stuff?!!?!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't the buyers get a last minute walk through prior to closing? If your crap is still in the house and, for whatever reason, they miss something that they would've otherwise noticed in a vacant house, that could be a problem.
I wanted the sellers out that day. We had shit to do and were planning on sleeping in the new house that night to get started early.
Does the buyer have a right to a walk-thru in a vacant house? We merely want to comply with the requirements in the contract.
Just as a PP said we have to vacate in accordance with the contract we also don't need to do any more than the contract calls for.
Anonymous wrote:Don't the buyers get a last minute walk through prior to closing? If your crap is still in the house and, for whatever reason, they miss something that they would've otherwise noticed in a vacant house, that could be a problem.
I wanted the sellers out that day. We had shit to do and were planning on sleeping in the new house that night to get started early.