Friday, December 17, 2010

Field Notes: Real Stories from Home Inspectors

1. A home inspector found termites in the garage of a home that was going to be purchased and renovated, then used as a rental. The bank refused to underwrite the loan for the buyer on account of the termites. Both the buyer and the buyer's real estate agent asked the home inspector to falsify his report, and retract the information in the report about the termites in the garage. The inspector refused.

2. A home inspector arrived at the house to be inspected, and received a telephone call from the bank employee doing the paperwork for the buyer's loan. The banker tells the home inspector that there can be nothing negative in the home inspection report, or the loan will not go through. The banker is married to the real estate agent representing the buyer. The home inspector refuses to compromise his integrity.

3. The home inspector performs a Radon test along with the home inspection, and the results come back high. The real estate agent suggests that the home inspector falsified the results. The inspector uses a continuous Radon monitor that is calibrated annually. Falsifying the data would be hard to do.

4. A home inspector performs a home inspection while the buyer is detained by the real estate agent in the living room. The buyer's son accompanies the inspector through the inspection. Several problems were found and reported, both verbally and in writing. Months later, the real estate agent is caught lying about the home inspector, claiming that the inspector failed to find various items, in an effort to dissuade a buyer from using that inspector. The real estate agent is successful in her efforts to manipulate the buyer. The home inspector is preparing to sue the real estate agent for slander and defamation of character.

5. A real estate agent has been working with a young family on finding a home. After the third home does not proceed to closing, the real estate agent suggests to the home inspector, on the fourth home, that the home is in very good condition and should not have any thing wrong with it. This is the third inspection that the inspector has done for this buyer. One of the previous inspections was done by an inspector claiming to be HUD certified. HUD does not regulate home inspectors. The real estate agent had been successful in lying to the buyer that they needed a HUD certified inspector for that inspection.

Not all real estate agents are deceivers and cheats. But many of them seem to be. The writer does know of one real estate agent who will not compromise his integrity under any circumstances.