Relying on the advertising, the
buyer believed the home to be "TOTALLY
RE-DONE" as described. He submitted
a
purchase offer, had an inspection and
closed on the home. One month later,
during a period of heavy rain, water dripped
from the light fixtures and a black substance began oozing from
beneath the baseboard of the kitchen's
exterior wall.
A builder called in to look at the damage
discovered that the new roof had been
incorrectly
installed causing water to enter the home.
The black substance was mold from
decaying wood framing that had been covered
up with new drywall and vinyl siding.
The new vinyl siding was installed with the
wrong fasteners and was falling off in
various places. There were only two new
windows and one new door, not new windows and
doors throughout. The others looked new, but
where ten years old.
Investigation revealed that the property had
been purchased as a foreclosure for $20,000.
The flipper spent approximately $10,000 for
materials and professional electrical,
plumbing and mechanical services for which
permits were approved.
Installation of the
leaking new roof, vinyl siding, drywall, kitchen
and
bath fixtures, appliances, cabinetry,
windows and doors were all completed by the
flippers. They recruited a Realtor to find a
buyer and successfully "flipped" the house for
a $40,000 profit.
The "flippers" later admitted they had no
knowledge of building construction, and excused themselves of wrongdoing by claiming they
didn't know they were doing
a poor job. They concluded that all fault rests with the
home inspector who didn't discover the
mistakes they had made.
To their credit, they did a "good job" of
covering up poor workmanship. Even a
building inspector from the City of Lansing
indicated that he didn't see anything
alarming when he looked it over.
The Resolution
Real estate law dictates that once you've
purchased a home or property...it's yours.
It can't be returned for a refund, unless
fraud is involved. This case is going to
court and charges of fraud are being used to
seek damages and restore the buyer back to
the financial condition he was in before
responding to the notorious advertisement.
Our advice
If the home is vacant and appears to have
had recent improvements such as flooring,
kitchen cabinetry, and freshly painted
walls, it may be a home being flipped. Have
your Realtor research the property's
history. The Realtor will be able to learn
if the home had previously been a
foreclosure and how much the current owner
paid. A call to the local building
department will indicate what permits were
recently applied for. With luck it may be
possible to learn something about the person
responsible for the work that was done to
the home.
If you decide to purchase the home, ask the
listing agent to produce receipts for
materials and labor that have been invested
in the home. When the home is inspected, be
sure to ask the inspector to look for
anything that may look like poor or
suspicious workmanship.
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