Everybody who follows my blog knows by now I'm currently deployed to the Middle East. However, I'm due back into the St. Louis area 8 Sept and once I return I'll be armed and ready to help the real etate world with a new weapon. Introducing...
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Approximately 5.3 million homes will be sold in the United States this year and several millions of rental units will change occupants this year.
Chances are that many of these properties are contaminated with Narcotics.
It is estimated that there are 600,000 undiscovered methamphetamine laboratories in America. They are found in both commercial properties and residential housing and half of all clandestine meth labs are located in rental properties. Only one in ten meth labs are ever found therefore, unknown meth labs go unreported. Thirty individual states do not maintain clandestine drug laboratory (CDL) lists. Therefore there are very limited public records listing properties that have been involved with methamphetamine production.
How will you handle stigmatized property disclosure of a former meth lab, pot farm, or drug crime site?
"Stigmatized property disclosure laws vary considerably from state to state.
Agents who work in states that don't offer specific legal guidelines face a tough dilemma. There is very little case law dealing with disclosing information on stigmatized properties.
Disclosure decisions are even more difficult in cases where a sales associate is unable to verify the facts of a reported problem or even determine whether it occurred.
Even if your state has a statute that exempts you from having to disclose stigmatized property, these laws usually don't prohibit disclosure.
And such a statute doesn't allay the uncomfortable feeling that you're "holding out" on your buyer clients. If you're like most of the real estate salespeople I know, you're torn between the fear of losing your buyer clients' trust and that of facing a lawsuit from owners who don't want the stigma disclosed.
The list of such dilemmas in this area is seemingly endless: As a seller's agent, telling buyers about a property's stigma without the seller's permission could be a breach of fiduciary duty. But if the buyers you're working with as customers ask you directly about a property stigma, you run the liability risk of misrepresentation if you fail to tell the truth about what you know.
As a buyer's representative, you'd probably have a fiduciary obligation to inform your clients of anything you know about a property even if such disclosure is exempted by state law." December 1, 2003 - Realtor Magazine, Author: Raine Zygmunt.
Continue this story at...
http://www.drugdetectivekit.com/real-estate.html
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