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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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On Sunday, July 16, 2017 at 3:51:14 AM UTC-4, Julie Bove wrote:
> "Bruce" > wrote in message > ... > > On Sat, 15 Jul 2017 19:34:29 -0700, "Julie Bove" > > > wrote: > > > >> > >>"Bruce" > wrote in message > . .. > >>> On Sat, 15 Jul 2017 12:21:27 -0400, jmcquown > > >>> wrote: > >>> > >>>>Maybe in Canada. In the US, until the actual "closing", anyone can back > >>>>out. > >>> > >>> Without penalty, really? What's the meaning of the sale contract they > >>> signed then? > >> > >>They can come up with a reason. Reason people kept backing out on this > >>house > >>was the siding. Or so they claimed. This kind of siding had a recall. We > >>were told that ours was fine and the recall didn't apply. But after buying > >>the house, I think the real reason was that it is flat out not up to code > >>and getting it up to code would cost a fortune. We had a guy who said he > >>would do it for $2,000 so we hired him only to have him walk away saying > >>that he'd been wrong and couldn't do the job for any price. We based what > >>we > >>paid for the house on that. Now we are stuck with a house that likely will > >>never be up to code. > > > > Can't you get a new quote? Or else, never move. > > A quote means nothing. I haven't got the money for anything like this. That > $2,000 that we once had is long gone. House has been riddled with plumbing > and electrical problems. Got those fixed. New roof. Had the exterior > painted. Replaced toilets and appliances. > > I have had many a handyman type person over here to do various things. When > I mentioned what the specific problem was, they'd look around, shake their > heads and admit that it would take a whole lot of work. Or weren't even sure > they could do it. In a nutshell, every part of the garage (and I use that > term loosely as it isn't big enough to park a car in) needs to be fully > unclosed with drywall. And because of the stupid way the remodeling of this > house was done, this would mean cutting many small and tiny pieces of the > stuff and fitting it around pipes, vents and other stuff. But some other > things would have to be done in case something went wrong and whatever was > enclosed in there needed to be accessed. Like a hatch or hatches or > something. That doesn't mean it couldn't be done "for any price". I conjecture that the contractor simply didn't want to deal with it. Drywall is not difficult. It might be expensive to have a professional fiddle with this job, but it doesn't sound like it cannot be done. Cindy Hamilton |
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