Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's your house now.
You people don't really how silly you sound. If you bought a $1500 iphone and it stopped working on day one, would you say, oh well "it's my iphone now" so I have no recourse? Truly astounding idiocy.
Anonymous wrote:It's your house now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thank you everyone for posts. We decided to get a structural engineer to make sure the foundation is okay. If it is we will call an HVAC contractor to seal the ducts under the slab. And we will also look into the grading by the side that flooded.
This stinks. It will likely cost $$$.
Now if the engineer finds a hidden foundation issue that's going to cost a lot to fix, what would we do?
The insurance company will likely deny the claim. And then they will drop them.
You should call your insurance company and file a claim.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thank you everyone for posts. We decided to get a structural engineer to make sure the foundation is okay. If it is we will call an HVAC contractor to seal the ducts under the slab. And we will also look into the grading by the side that flooded.
This stinks. It will likely cost $$$.
Now if the engineer finds a hidden foundation issue that's going to cost a lot to fix, what would we do?
Anonymous wrote:You can file a suit for the cost of the new damage. They may go 1/2 of the cost if they are decent people to avoid further stress.
Op, I know how you feel. We moved to Seattle 25 years ago, within two months, the sewage leaked all over the basement! It was an older home 1926. We just sucked up and paid for a new pipe around $10K.
If I am in your situation now, I would work with a lawyer!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The seller may have lied and his more extensive problems. But they were smart in disclosing "something". They covered themselves so any litigation will cost you money. This why these disclosure forms are frankly useless. I wish people just ignore anything the seller says. It's critical for prospective buyer to have separate inspections for electric, foundation, and plumbing.
I know someone who supposedly bought a house and few days later ended up finding a $250k foundation damage. He tried to sue the seller but was not successful.
Hey, moron, OP said they had the place inspected and "confirmed the fixes." They DID "ignore" the seller. So what the hell are you talking about?
It isn't clear they had an independent inspector. People often just let their agent set that up, who obviously doesn't want to do anything to kill the sale.
This is paranoid bullshit. A buyer's agent isn't going to recommend a shitty or unscrupulous inspector just to not "kill the sale."
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thank you everyone for posts. We decided to get a structural engineer to make sure the foundation is okay. If it is we will call an HVAC contractor to seal the ducts under the slab. And we will also look into the grading by the side that flooded.
This stinks. It will likely cost $$$.
Now if the engineer finds a hidden foundation issue that's going to cost a lot to fix, what would we do?