Daily Southtown

Winning, but risky, strategy

Leaks, termites and cracked foundation­s: Skipping home inspection­s in a competitiv­e market is tempting, but problems can surface later

- By Michaelle Bond

The woman had just bought a house an investor flipped in Montgomery County, Pennsylvan­ia. She skipped a home inspection to compete against other buyers and, a couple months ago, she asked inspector Ben Poles to take a look.

As part of his usual examinatio­n, Poles, who owns Rest Assured Inspection­s in Pottstown, filled up the tub in a second-floor bathroom. The water didn’t get hot. When he went downstairs to investigat­e the cause, he saw that wasn’t the homeowner’s biggest problem: Water was pouring through the ceiling, and the drywall was coming apart.

“When I was borrowing paper towels from the neighbors, I was thinking: This is why you get an inspection before you buy the house,” he said. “Because now it’s on you to fix things.”

He called the homeowner, and “you could hear her heart just sink.”

To make offers more attractive in a strong sellers market and to beat competitor­s, buyers are continuing to skip home inspection­s, which are meant to protect them. And they’re doing so at rates the real estate industry has never before seen. Inspection contingenc­ies let buyers back out of a deal or try to get sellers to pay for repairs before a sale.

“In this white-hot market, buyers feel the pressure to make all sorts of concession­s,” said Angela Giampolo, managing attorney at Philadelph­ia-based Giampolo Law Group.

It can be a winning — if risky — strategy for some.

“For better or for worse,” said Scott Reidenbach, founding principal of Reidenbach & Associates, based in Wayne, “you now have the house.” And some buyers find themselves in the “worse” category.

The Montgomery County woman with the destroyed bathroom was one of several of Poles’ clients who waived the home inspection and then later told him, “we just want (one) for peace of mind.”

“Some of these people,” he said, “they don’t get peace of mind after I go in there.”

In fall 2020, Poles said, he hadn’t really seen home buyers waiving inspection­s. “That has changed big time,” he said.

The usual concession­s that used to win over sellers haven’t been enough for some who have their pick of offers and often look for the easiest and quickest deal. If buyers waive inspection­s, that’s one less opportunit­y for the sale to fall through, and the seller basically gets to sell the home as is.

“It’s making people feel desperate and make bad decisions, and they’re really paying for it,” said Austin Freundlich, partner and co-owner at Freundlich & Littman, based in Philadelph­ia. “There are a lot of first-time home buyers out there that are going to get completely fleeced.”

Real estate profession­als don’t recommend that buyers waive inspection­s of homes — the biggest purchases they likely will ever make. Freundlich just bought a home, and given what he’s seen in his law practice, he said he didn’t even consider waiving any contingenc­ies.

Skipped inspection­s can mean unhappy surprises

Walking through a house without seeing obvious problems or buying newly constructe­d homes can leave buyers with a false sense of security. Inspection­s are designed to find issues that aren’t evident.

New homeowners are encounteri­ng problems with HVAC systems, lawyers said. They’re poorly constructe­d, which can mean leaks and mold, or they don’t properly control temperatur­e or ensure air quality throughout the home.

Roofs leak. Floors in newly built homes warp. Termites compromise the home’s structure. Cracks in foundation­s let in water. Poor plumbing drips water through walls.

Freundlich had one client whose bedroom wall collapsed because of a water leak. Another client discovered the home’s basement floods with sewage.

Calls to Bose Houser, president and chief executive officer of the Philadelph­ia-based design and constructi­on company Rocks + Cornerston­es, include complaints about electrical switches not working and backlogged toilets.

“Most of the time, it’s the things you don’t see until you start trying to use the house,” she said.

Buyers know they made a mistake.

What buyers can do after a purchase

Buyers who waive their rights to inspection­s still have some options if they find problems after a sale. They can go after sellers under consumer protection laws or challenge a builder if they find defects in new homes under warranty.

Anger over bad deals is driving an increase in legal claims by buyers against sellers, Reidenbach said.

A common route is for buyers to accuse owners of not telling them everything they knew was wrong with the home on the seller’s property disclosure form, a document required by law. Through negotiatio­ns or a lawsuit, they can try to get money from the seller to fix problems by accusing the prior homeowner of purposeful­ly concealing issues or failing to disclose issues they should have known about.

But, Giampolo said, “you don’t want to hang your hat on that.” Proving what a seller knew can be difficult. And buyers have to weigh legal costs of investigat­ing and potentiall­y suing their sellers against the severity of the issues to be fixed.

Buyers are waiving more than home inspection­s

“To my dismay, many people are still waiving everything when making an offer,” said Reidenbach, who has been practicing law for 24 years. “I’ve never seen this many buyers waiving this many contingenc­ies.”

Some buyers are giving up appraisal contingenc­ies, which say that the sale depends on a lender agreeing that the home is worth the price. If the lender determines that the home is worth less, these buyers have to come up with the difference in value. Waiving mortgage contingenc­ies means buyers can’t walk away from the deal if they can’t get financing by the settlement date.

Waiving clear title, or ownership, of a property is “off the Richter scale of danger,” but buyers across the country do it, Giampolo said. They may later find someone else’s liens passed on to them.

“I feel like people think it’s far-fetched that title problems happen but it’s just not,” she said.

Freundlich advises home buyers to do their due diligence before purchasing and to avoid getting caught up in the frenzy they see around them.

“It just might not be worth it,” he said.

 ?? TYGER WILLIAMS/THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER ?? Ben Poles said that in the fall of 2020 he hadn’t really seen home buyers waiving inspection­s. “That has changed big time,” he said.
TYGER WILLIAMS/THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER Ben Poles said that in the fall of 2020 he hadn’t really seen home buyers waiving inspection­s. “That has changed big time,” he said.

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