RemitAdvice
Member
VA
I closed on my home in May. My inspection was performed in April. Over the weekend, during some heavy rains, the gutters on the front of my house fell off.
So I scrambled up onto the roof to see what the heck was going on and I can see and feel that the fascia and soffits are rotten. Soffits are plywood.
I reviewed my home inspection report and the section titled 'fascia & soffits' lists the description of such and then has a question listed 'Damaged' where the inspector entered a response of 'No'.
Would it be possible that such extensive rot (they're gross, truly) would have taken place over a period of four months? My area has also had extremely dry weather over the summer, with it raining only recently.
Would the inspector and related company, be liable to fix the damage or at least refund the cost of the inspection?
Can anyone give me a heads up on what my next steps should be? It will be fixed before the winter gets here and probably in the next week or so...I don't want any additional damage now that I know it's there and I'm pretty handy and could probably fix it myself, with some assistance...but I'm no Bob Vila, and would really like to have it corrected by a professional, if possible.
I've searched some threads around here with similar issues, and they general consensus seems to be that the inspector is liable...
I closed on my home in May. My inspection was performed in April. Over the weekend, during some heavy rains, the gutters on the front of my house fell off.
So I scrambled up onto the roof to see what the heck was going on and I can see and feel that the fascia and soffits are rotten. Soffits are plywood.
I reviewed my home inspection report and the section titled 'fascia & soffits' lists the description of such and then has a question listed 'Damaged' where the inspector entered a response of 'No'.
Would it be possible that such extensive rot (they're gross, truly) would have taken place over a period of four months? My area has also had extremely dry weather over the summer, with it raining only recently.
Would the inspector and related company, be liable to fix the damage or at least refund the cost of the inspection?
Can anyone give me a heads up on what my next steps should be? It will be fixed before the winter gets here and probably in the next week or so...I don't want any additional damage now that I know it's there and I'm pretty handy and could probably fix it myself, with some assistance...but I'm no Bob Vila, and would really like to have it corrected by a professional, if possible.
I've searched some threads around here with similar issues, and they general consensus seems to be that the inspector is liable...