Q. My siblings and I recently sold our late parents’ small home in a sought-after urban neighborhood where we all grew up. We accepted the highest of several offers (well above asking price) from buyers we assumed would renovate the house. To our dismay, it is being replaced by a huge new home that’s out of character with the block. Our former neighbors are upset with us, too. Didn’t the buyers or their agent have a legal or moral obligation to tell us of their tear-down intent? How could we have prevented this?
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A. I don’t think the buyers or their agent had any obligation, legal or ethical, to disclose their plans to you voluntarily. If anything, the burden was on you and your listing agent to ask them or otherwise try to ascertain the intentions of the various people seeking to buy the home—a difficult task at best. But even if bidders had verbally agreed to keep the house intact, the promise wouldn’t have been binding on them; they could always say they changed their mind after learning the renovation
Perhaps your agent didn’t educate you on the economic
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Yes, you could have blocked this outcome, but only by putting into the contract a stipulation (or a covenant or deed restriction) that the house couldn’t be torn down or the façade significantly altered for a certain number of years. But be assured, that would have scared off not only the tear-down buyers but also the renovators who would not want the potential hassles of such a restriction. And you would certainly have received a much lower price for your parents’ home
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Read more at http://www.kiplinger.com/article/real-estate/T010-C013-S002-should-tear-down-plans-be-disclosed-by-home-buyers.html#mluJMPrL0H5id5w0.99
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