The New Zealand Herald

House buyers in dark over past

Real estate agency wins compo battle, and feels it was right in not revealing previous suicide at property

- Rebecca Quilliam

Acouple who sold their “dark”, “sad” and “depressing” Auckland home before they realised there had been a suicide on the property have lost their bid to be compensate­d by the real estate agents involved in the purchase.

The Real Estate Agents Disciplina­ry Tribunal has upheld a Complaints Assessment Committee (CAC) ruling that Barfoot & Thompson should have told its clients about the death, but declined to award any damages.

Richard and Evette Campbell told the tribunal they would never have bought the Flat Bush house if they had known a tenant had taken his life in the garage on the property about a year before the sale.

About five months after the home was bought, the Campbells put it back on the market.

They told the tribunal they felt “uneasy in the property and that it was dark and felt sad and depressing”.

After selling the house, the couple discovered via a neighbour about the suicide.

They told the new owners, who sold the house before moving into it.

One of Barfoot’s directors, Garth Barfoot, told the tribunal the firm decided not to put informatio­n about the suicide in marketing material for a number of reasons, including that it was a personal matter for the former tenants and had no relevance to the condition of the property.

The Campbells appealed to the tribunal against the CAC decision not to award compensati­on and Barfoot’s appealed against the conduct ruling.

However, the tribunal agreed with the committee and upheld its ruling.

It said many prospectiv­e purchasers might not be bothered by the “sad event” that happened at the property.

“On the other hand, we realise that many prospectiv­e purchasers would find that event to create some sort of stigma or spiritual concern and make them feel uncomforta­ble on the property.”

But the decision said the situation was a “grey area” in the industry and each case should be treated on its own merits.

Barfoot compliance manager Max House said it had to weigh up the confidenti­ality issue with the seller and making disclosure­s to the buyer.

“We would have preferred obviously for the tribunal to give us a definitive ruling — they haven’t.”

But the firm said it still felt it had made the right decision at the time with the informatio­n it had and was deciding whether to appeal against the ruling to the High Court.

Anglican priest Alister Hendery has performed blessings in homes where deaths have occurred and he said the owners were generally left with a “sense of peace” afterwards.

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