Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My seller took his old garbage cans with him even though he knew I was moving from out of state. What he needed it for who knows. Am I supposed to move my old garage can house to house (which I did not)
People who move locally or nearby will take their garbage cans. It happens.
What are you supposed to do? Go to Home Depot or Lowe's and buy a new one. When you move into a house, you'll typically spend a lot of small trips or at least one big trip to home improvement store for all sorts of odds and ends that you'll need.
Anonymous wrote:My seller took his old garbage cans with him even though he knew I was moving from out of state. What he needed it for who knows. Am I supposed to move my old garage can house to house (which I did not)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It its a fixture attached to a wall (closet fixtures, wall sconces, towel bars, curtain rods) it goes with the house unless you exempted it in the contract. That's real estate law. If you take stuff like this you risk negating the sale.
DC law? Or NOVA law?
Drapes are not attached to the walls. The rods are but drapes are not.
Anonymous wrote:We bought a house here but moved to an extended stay hotel first. We remodelled the house based on our needs and taste, so we did not wanted most of what they had anyways. In our old house in another state, we left all of our furniture behind. My brother sold our house after we left. Our furniture, furnishing, cleaning supplies, vacuum, vacuum bags etc conveyed. The house was professionally painted and cleaned after we left and before showing the house. We left behind the shower curtains, all fixtures, toilet roll, toilet brush and cleaning supplies and a basket of hotel toiletries in each bathroom. My brother paid to keep our patio plants watered and lawn mowed. We left behind our hose and planters etc. Finally, we had left 4 plates, cups, bowls and spoons, knife etc in the kitchen along with 1-2 pots and pans. My brother also left $20- $30 worth of grocery in the fridge and pantry - juice, milk, eggs, butter, bread, fruit, cooking oil, salt, sugar, tea, instant coffee etc. We sold to a family with young children and the mom and dad both called to thank us. My family still lives close by to our old house. It's a small town and we were taught to be gracious. Is the boorishness a part of being in a big town and the anonymity that make people think that they can get away with things?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The drapes! OMG we were exposed to the world!
The seller took the machine that hooked into the ceiling speakers all over the house so you could play music. He should NOT have taken that. It's been years, but I still think about how petty that was. And now the technology is old so I don't even know how to replace it.
That was petty, but you can buy an amp from Sonos that will connect wired speakers into a Sonos wireless system. We have a combo -- the old wired speakers and new wireless speakers, and it works great.
Anonymous wrote:another for the light bulbs. Sneaky bastard came the day before we were to move in and took them all. Got him back though. We kept his tools he left in the garage storage room. Dumb shit forgot and never came back for them.
Anonymous wrote:Mine is a flip...something I left but was ordered to take.
When I sold my house, I picked one storage closet and I carefully labelled and left a lot of odds and ends. The paint cans for all of the paint used in the house, so that someone could touch up or repaint areas that needed resurfacing. I know that many people will change colors, but sometimes it's not in the cards to do it right away and you might want to touch up an area until you get around to repainting. There were a few areas that had some wallpaper. I left the remainder of the wallpaper for the same reason. I left unused hardware for things installed in the house, that could be used for simple basic repairs if needed. I left some carpet remnants for the new carpeting that had been installed after we moved out. Etc.
The buyers came in and the wife was LIVID. She called me actually angry and told me I had left a closetful of junk in the house and that I needed to come over that day to remove the junk. I explained what this was, things to repair and touch up things in the house until they were replaced. She told me that she didn't want any of that trash and that I did not do a good job cleaning and that she was going to try and charge me a cleaning fee (we had already closed, so this was not going to happen).
I finally figured the best thing to do was just to appease her. I took a big box, went to the house (we had only moved 2 miles away) and I tossed everything that I had carefully labelled and stored in the box and put it out to the curb. I sent a text to the husband to let him know that I had done as his wife instructed. I went by there the next day and noticed that the box was gone (but trash pickup was still 2 days away). I assume that the husband realized that he was going to need this stuff and found someplace for the stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My seller took his old garbage cans with him even though he knew I was moving from out of state. What he needed it for who knows. Am I supposed to move my old garage can house to house (which I did not)
People who move locally or nearby will take their garbage cans. It happens.
What are you supposed to do? Go to Home Depot or Lowe's and buy a new one. When you move into a house, you'll typically spend a lot of small trips or at least one big trip to home improvement store for all sorts of odds and ends that you'll need.
Anonymous wrote:My seller took his old garbage cans with him even though he knew I was moving from out of state. What he needed it for who knows. Am I supposed to move my old garage can house to house (which I did not)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't fathom taking light bulbs. My guess is they use them again in their new home and the bulbs burn out after a month or so... what a PITA to deal with. Same with blinds- it prob. costs more to have them retrofitted than they are worth. They probably end up getting tossed. And seriously- toilet paper? Wowza.
We took the window treatments the last time we moved. My employer hired a (not very) professional moving company to pack up our stuff and move it. I didn’t realize how closely I needed to supervise this process, and I just left it to them. When we started unpacking, I realized that there were several things we took that I hadn’t intended to bring with me.