The Mercury News

How to weather surprises that arise during a home inspection

- Marni Jameson Contact Jameson at www. marnijames­on.com.

“We accepted an offer on our house,” I tell my colleague. “Already?” she says.

I shrug. “It took 18 days. I was trying to beat my record of one day.”

“We did have a hurricane,” she reminds me, then adds, “You don’t seem very excited.”

“Not till it’s over,” I say wearily.

Accepting an offer is just the beginning.

Our buyers, a lovely, highly qualified couple, saw our home before Hurricane Irma hit, but wanted to wait until she blew through to make an offer. That seemed reasonable.

The offer came in. We negotiated and accepted. And last week we had the home inspection.

“It would have been perfectly clean except for the storm damage,” my broker tells me in a call at work. “The inspector noticed that some water had seeped in beneath a window,” my agent said. Though the wall looked normal, when the inspector looked closer and used a moisture meter he detected wetness, right down to the floor.

I feel the imaginary cord between my temples pull tug-a-war tight.

I chased the home inspector and the buying and selling agents. “No house is built to withstand 100-mile-an-hour winds bringing driving rain into it sideways,” the inspector assured the prospectiv­e buyers and later us. This house is very well made, and the problem is an easy fix because we caught it early.”

Our handyman said, “We just remove the drywall and baseboards under the window, pull out the insulation, let everything dry out, put in new insulation, new drywall and baseboards, and it will look like new.”

While natural disasters can dampen a deal, if repairs are handled properly, promptly and profession­ally, they rarely cause a deal to fail, says Frank Lesh, a veteran home inspector and executive director of the American Society of Home Inspectors.

“As nervous as inspection­s make buyers and sellers, once you go through the house and show the client the issues and talk about them, they relax,” he says.

Across town, the sellers of the house we are buying field similar inspection concerns from us. Being in the middle of this on both sides, I had some questions for Lesh:

QHow often does an inspection kill a deal?

ASeldom, says Lesh. Fewer than one in 50 deals go south as the result of an inspection report, he says. About 4 percent of houses that go under contract have “sale fail,” according to Trulia, but buyer financing and low appraisals are the most common reasons.

QHow can inspectors make or break deals?

A“Home inspectors are by nature fault finders,” he says. “They key is how they convey negative informatio­n.” Good ones put problems in perspectiv­e. They neither marginaliz­e a big problem nor magnify a small one. They are frank, without being alarmist.

QWhat if something happens to the home between inspection and closing?

AMost sales contracts require sellers to keep the house in the same condition it was the day of the inspection. So, if the roof blows off between the inspection and the closing or the water heater springs a leak, the sellers need to fix it. Buyers have a chance on their final walk-through to make sure everything is as promised.

QShould you rely on your agent to choose your home inspector?

AIf you trust your agent, start by getting his or her recommenda­tion, says Lesh. “Although agents have a personal stake in making sure the deal closes, pointing you to a weak inspector would be very shortsight­ed of them.” Also ask friends for recommenda­tions, then check the inspector’s credential­s to make sure he’s certified and experience­d.

QWhat is the biggest mistake clients make?

AThey don’t show up. “You have to be at the inspection,” says Lesh. “Do not just say ‘Send the report.’ ” On paper a small issue can seem huge, and a big issue may seem small. Another mistake clients make is not reading the report carefully.

QWhat recourse do you have if the inspector misses something?

AAsk up front what the procedure is if the inspector misses a problem that owners discover after they move in. If that happens, first call the inspector and tell him. If the issue wasn’t mentioned in the report, most inspectors will offer to pay to have it fixed, or refund their inspection fee. If it’s a very expensive repair, buyers may have some recourse through the inspector’s errors and omissions insurance.

QHow can I get the most out of a home inspection?

AListen and learn not only about your new home’s structural integrity and what needs to be fixed, but also about how to properly care for your investment so it lasts.

 ?? COURTESY OF DREAMSTIME.COM ?? Until it’s done, a house deal can feel as shaky as a house of cards.
COURTESY OF DREAMSTIME.COM Until it’s done, a house deal can feel as shaky as a house of cards.
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