Builder asking for money a year after move-in
kristinva
12 years ago
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dakota01
12 years agoRelated Discussions
Overwhelmed a Year after Moving In!
Comments (17)I had the same problem, and it was incredibly embarassing that we had a "box room." For the first couple months not so much, but after the first year, I kind of started getting ashamed of still having stuff in boxes, especially all the family pictures. We have no intention of moving anytime soon, so why should we keep this stuff packed up? First I started thinking of things I could do with the box room. I chose computer room/sewing room. This got me motivated to start clearing it out: I got a new sewing machine and a new printer, and I wasn't going to use them until I had the boxes OUT. I did allow some boxes to live in the closet, but my rule is that nothing can protrude from the closet, so that I can still close the doors. Next I pulled out three boxes into the living room, and started emptying them out into 3 piles: Keep, Trash, and Donate. If I was going to keep it, and there was a place for it in the house already, I went ahead and put it away. Then once those 3 boxes were empty, I put the stuff from the piles into those boxes. The trash box went straight outside to the trash cans. The donate box went straight to my car (the passenger seat, not the trunk--you'll forget it in the trunk), and the keep box went back to the box room (but labelled KEEP). I tried to sort through 3 boxes whenever I could find the time (usually whenever my favorite programs were on TV, so I could watch while I sorted). I also tried to do it when DH wasn't around, b/c he gets upset when I throw his stuff away, even when he hasn't seen or used it in years. It takes awhile, but if you keep it to the 3-box, 3-pile system, it helps control the amount of stuff that ends up creeping out of the box room into the rest of the house. When you're done sorting, you can either stash all the Keep boxes in the closet and be done with it, or you can create places to put the stuff you kept (shelving, etc). Good luck! I'm so glad I finally eliminated my box room. It's neat to have a sewing room now. I feel like we must be rich if we can afford an extra room just for sewing! (Okay, it's only a 3 bedroom house, but still....)...See MoreBuilder demands money for upgrades with no change orders
Comments (6)No lawyer was ever involved in he process as far as I'm aware. Thanks for your responses. I don't want to be dishonest and pay nothing. But the builder has been very unethical about some other things up to this point (for example, he refuses to install cabinets in my laundry room, even though the plans included them; the house was more than a month late and he refused to cover any hotel/storage costs, etc.). I'm only now learning about my rights as a buyer -- I'm a first-timer and very naiive! -- so thanks again for your advice. I'll have to see where I go from here....See MoreBuilder is terrible. I'm bleeding money
Comments (14)Just my 2¢ I still have a few questions about your situation, but will try to offer some advice. First, you refer to a builder and the modular home company. I am a little unclear if the builder is the modular home company, or if you used a recommended builder of theirs. If the modular home company and the builder are separate entities and you made payments to the builder rather than or in addition to the modular home company they are not likely to have any exposure. Next, while it is very tempting to start looking for assigning blame in these things, it is the wrong thing to do. It doesn't matter why the basement leaks and it doesn't really even matter whose fault it is. All that is important is getting the best solution you can for the least amount of money. Of course, the perfect solution is to get the problem repaired at zero cost, however, in this situation the perfect solution is probably not attainable. I often see people spend a dollar chasing a dime, just because they are right. This means that you might be better off finding some middle ground. Finally, something about actually going to court. You should listen to your attorney on this one, but I would like to throw some things out there to think about. In reality, the advisability of cases like this is much more complex than who is right. A small builder may not have enough recoverable assets to make winning worthwhile and large builders may shield themselves in the contract, corporate structure, etc. Suing takes a lot of time and money and for a lawsuit to be your best option you have to have evidence of a positive net recovery (actual money paid to you less what you paid to get it). ETA: I wrote this a long time ago and apparently never hit submit. Forgive me if the information is no longer relevant....See MoreBuyer has asked for $5K after inspection AND now is asking for repairs
Comments (14)"who cares if I pi$$ them off" I think some buyers have that attitude. What they forget is that the owner still is living and taking care of that house until the closing. Do you really want to piss off someone who is taking care of one of the biggest investment you probably will make in your life? It don't think it work out good for our buyer. As I said before, ours was a custom home built by us and using commercial electrician and plumber. There was valves and switches all over the house that a normal house did not have. I was going to label everything for the new owner until the princess started trying to squeeze money out of us. Heck there was switches I didn't even know what they were for, but my husband did. Then my attitude changed to "figure it out yourself." The last straw came when a few days before the closing when she wanted to inconvenience everyone to change their schedules to move the closing up by a day so she wouldn't be inconvenienced and could have some work done before they moved in on Saturday. Of course we said NO. That is when I really lost it. It was not nice, but I sabotaged the house. I knew she didn't know how to do anything and I don't think he he knew a hammer from a screwdriver. I didn't do nothing petty like taking light bulbs or damaging the home. I made sure every switch and valve was off. I know they probably ended up calling in trades to figure out why the doorbell didn't ring, or why the gas fireplaces and grills didn't work, or why they couldn't program the garage and front door, etc. Well the doorbell had a hidden switch to turn it on and off and I shut it off. There were extra safety valves for the gas fireplaces and grills in the basement ceiling at different locations that were turned off. The codes they were given to open the garage and front door was a guest code not the master code. The garage door didn't open because it was also on a switch and the same with the outside garage motion detector. The outdoor plugs didn't work either unless a switch was on. Somehow they got my son who lived close by phone number and tried calling him several times. He just ignored them. I know it wasn't nice to sabotage the house, but looking back I still have no regrets, because she was a royal bit_ch. We move to our new house a week before the closing and after all we were just protecting the empty house from theft or gas leaks. lol...See Morebevangel_i_h8_h0uzz
12 years agoathensmomof3
12 years agokristinva
12 years agopps7
12 years agokristinva
12 years ago
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