Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did not read through this whole thread, but we also bought a house with mold 10 years ago. Our sellers did not disclose it, but the inspector found it in our crawl space and recommended abating it. The house did not smell, at least not from that. At first, our sellers balked and did not want to pay. We eventually settled; they gave us $10,000 for it (what we were told it would cost), but it only cost us about $1,500 to get rid of. Just wanted to share my experience; if you're stuck with it, maybe it won't cost as much to get rid of as you think. Good luck.
Wow you certainly scammed them. Karma will get you.
Anonymous wrote:I did not read through this whole thread, but we also bought a house with mold 10 years ago. Our sellers did not disclose it, but the inspector found it in our crawl space and recommended abating it. The house did not smell, at least not from that. At first, our sellers balked and did not want to pay. We eventually settled; they gave us $10,000 for it (what we were told it would cost), but it only cost us about $1,500 to get rid of. Just wanted to share my experience; if you're stuck with it, maybe it won't cost as much to get rid of as you think. Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:I did not read through this whole thread, but we also bought a house with mold 10 years ago. Our sellers did not disclose it, but the inspector found it in our crawl space and recommended abating it. The house did not smell, at least not from that. At first, our sellers balked and did not want to pay. We eventually settled; they gave us $10,000 for it (what we were told it would cost), but it only cost us about $1,500 to get rid of. Just wanted to share my experience; if you're stuck with it, maybe it won't cost as much to get rid of as you think. Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:OP, talk to your neighbors.
I bet they know exactly when this occured.
We discovered some issues, not as big as yours, after the fact.
Talking to the neighbors it came out that the sellers were aware of the issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:eh, it's weird that this HUGE problem in two of the main living areas was never noted on the initial tour of the house, home inspection or final walk thru by anyone - not the buyer, not the agents, not the inspector. How can that be?
Is that buyer's remorse I smell? Do I hear someone trying to get out of their own poor decision making and trying to pin the responsibility on someone else? That may or not be the case here. If Op would elaborate on how these very significant problems were completely overlooked by everyone, every time they were in that house that would be helpful. Right now I'm having a hard time seeing this as described..
I only saw the house 3x before closing on it. I never noticed it. No buyers remorse. Please don't think that. I'm not trying to get out of the house. My remorse is for not moving all furniture and allowing sellers to abandon furniture. I also wish I had paid more attention during my inspection. I thought I had done my due diligence. I still think I did. I wonder now what was in the garage that prevented me from seeing the after damage there. I spent half an hour in the garage during the inspection. I love the house. I actually think I've understated the damage. The floor in the corner fell in tonight.my foot can now go through to the basement.
I'm not trying to pin responsibility. In a way I hope this is a caution for future buyers. I'm very sad about this whole ordeal.
Anonymous wrote:Agent again.
You do not have to agree to the release of the deposit that the title company is holding. Did you already sign off on that? With a rentback, the sellers should have escrowed all the money for rent and deposit and only get the deposit back when you agree. So, what happened there. Please don't tell me there was no deposit...
.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:eh, it's weird that this HUGE problem in two of the main living areas was never noted on the initial tour of the house, home inspection or final walk thru by anyone - not the buyer, not the agents, not the inspector. How can that be?
Is that buyer's remorse I smell? Do I hear someone trying to get out of their own poor decision making and trying to pin the responsibility on someone else? That may or not be the case here. If Op would elaborate on how these very significant problems were completely overlooked by everyone, every time they were in that house that would be helpful. Right now I'm having a hard time seeing this as described..
I only saw the house 3x before closing on it. I never noticed it. No buyers remorse. Please don't think that. I'm not trying to get out of the house. My remorse is for not moving all furniture and allowing sellers to abandon furniture. I also wish I had paid more attention during my inspection. I thought I had done my due diligence. I still think I did. I wonder now what was in the garage that prevented me from seeing the after damage there. I spent half an hour in the garage during the inspection. I love the house. I actually think I've understated the damage. The floor in the corner fell in tonight.my foot can now go through to the basement.
I'm not trying to pin responsibility. In a way I hope this is a caution for future buyers. I'm very sad about this whole ordeal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:eh, it's weird that this HUGE problem in two of the main living areas was never noted on the initial tour of the house, home inspection or final walk thru by anyone - not the buyer, not the agents, not the inspector. How can that be?
Is that buyer's remorse I smell? Do I hear someone trying to get out of their own poor decision making and trying to pin the responsibility on someone else? That may or not be the case here. If Op would elaborate on how these very significant problems were completely overlooked by everyone, every time they were in that house that would be helpful. Right now I'm having a hard time seeing this as described..
I was thinking the same... that OP is having a bad case of the buyer's remorse.
I'm starting to agree with you. I am the agent who suggested OP could at least halt the disbursement of funds because it is Virginia, and no response to that - twice now. So what is this - just a pot stirrer? What's really going on because all I see is a lot of complaining and not a lot of doing anything to fix it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Was the desk wet and moldy?
Or just the floors?
Were the rafters bare in the basement or were they hidden by ceiling tiles?
How do you hide a wet moldy desk in your living room? Enquiring minds would love to know.
Anonymous wrote:eh, it's weird that this HUGE problem in two of the main living areas was never noted on the initial tour of the house, home inspection or final walk thru by anyone - not the buyer, not the agents, not the inspector. How can that be?
Is that buyer's remorse I smell? Do I hear someone trying to get out of their own poor decision making and trying to pin the responsibility on someone else? That may or not be the case here. If Op would elaborate on how these very significant problems were completely overlooked by everyone, every time they were in that house that would be helpful. Right now I'm having a hard time seeing this as described..
my foot can now go through to the basement.