Houston Chronicle Sunday

Buyer notices condo doesn’t match sales material’s pictures

- By Steve McLinden BANKRATE.COM

Q : We were first purchasers when we made a down payment on our condo. Promotiona­l materials plus the website showed large, clear picture windows, which we thought would highlight a fabulous view. With the building finally under constructi­on, it’s obvious the windows aren’t anything like that. Instead, each window section is made up of several small panels. Do we have any recourse for this incorrect promotion? — Stephen N.

A : First, ask for a copy of the condo’s offering plan, where it should state the manufactur­er and model numbers of all materials used, including the windows that are being installed.

By the way, consumer advocates recommend a prospectiv­e condo purchaser read the offering plan and run it by an attorney before signing a purchase agreement.

If the windows going up aren’t being installed in error (which is likely), notify the builder and condo marketers of this by registered mail, saying that you aren’t willing to move forward in light of this change, assuming you aren’t. (By the way, if you have copies of the marketing materials and the website’s materials depicting the full-length picture windows, keep them.)

Can you get out of your contract?

Realize that some laws allow developers to change building materials and plans during constructi­on as long as the substitute­s aren’t “of lesser quality or design.” While “quality” is a relative call, the design has been changed substantia­lly. Inform the sellers of this.

If you’re thinking that you’ll just change the windows once you move in, don’t. Even if you’re technicall­y allowed to change the glass (by condo rules), the windows must still match the overall appearance of the condo complex, where the type of full picture-window you wanted is apparently nonexisten­t.

You’re probably also wondering whether you’re being short-changed (inferior insulation, etc.) elsewhere in your unit. If enough promises are not delivered, you and other condo buyers may have a case against the builders for fraudulent concealmen­t.

But rather than getting involved in a long and potentiall­y costly dispute, keep that fraud suspicion handy for leverage if the owner/builder balks at letting you out of your contract with full-deposit refund.

Some states have tightened laws to make it harder for homeowners to sue builders, requiring mediators to settle most disputes out of court.

Ask for an adjustment

You may have to consult with an attorney; he or she will have a better idea if the condo sellers made deliberate material misreprese­ntations, which you relied on and would suffer damages from as a result.

Another possible “out” is if there’s an “outside” or “dropdead” date on your purchase agreements that entitles you to cancel the contract with your money back if the unit isn’t ready in time.

Most of the time, though, the buyer has to ask for this to be included in the contract.

If you still want to buy the unit — and I’d be a bit surprised if you do — and these small-panel windows are what you’re stuck with, then you’re owed a sizable adjustment of some kind. I also would hire an inspector to look at the place and match the end product with what you were promised before you sign final papers.

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