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Strategies & Market Trends : The Residential Real Estate Post-Crash Index-Moderated

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To: Bluestryp who wrote (8905)2/26/2011 6:22:00 PM
From: BWAC2 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) of 119361
 
<<How do I enforce, file a Notice to Perform? What will the seller do? And can I stop the opening of the escrow until this is decided?>>

All depends on how much you want the house. Assuming you want it, I would first pay for and have an inspection done at your expense. Then you know what you are dealing with in regards to damage or repairs. Might be nothing big, might be something termite or structural, and you walk away at that point with a small claims court case to recover the inspection fees.

I would not sign an ammendment until I had the above inspection report. And then only if I still wanted the house.

You'll need an attorney or a good legal mind yourself to seek enforcement of the current contract. And that is going to cost money. Try to resolve with your low cost inspection before resolving with your high cost attorney.

If they play around and March 22 nears wihtout action I would start to drop the hints of suing to enforce the contract. You most likely will have to drop the hints on the house owner, the real estate agent representing the owner, and the bankster.

And I bet you find the f'n bankster is the real one behind the request for ammendment. IE The request is really coming from the f'n bankster who is setting the deal terms and not the house bagholder. Because the bankster wants you to bail his loss out as much as possible, and repair bills create more loss.
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