mcmarsha67
Member
What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? Ohio
I have a rental and walked in on a real mess this last winter. The tenants vacated without notice. I found the damage really soon after they'd left. Plus, I have it set up that the utilities revert right back into my name so there would always be service to the place, so no problem there.
When I threw open the door, I saw that many of the walls had dropped from the ceiling in some places about as much as 1/2 an inch. They dropped as a result of the slab dropping. The house has a floating slab...no basement. We spent hundreds and hundreds of dollars trying to figure out if the cause was done by broken water lines under the slab. This never turned up anything.
I recently learned from the neighbor at the rental that the elbow from off of one of the downspouts was discovered missing and replaced upon discovery without me being told about any of it. Also, major ice damming kept occurring due to the bad winter and water would make its way down into the walls/foundation. Yes, it was an exceptionally bad winter AND it was also discovered by a heating contractor that 2 heat pipes for two of the bedrooms were loose and 20% of the heat was being lost into the attic above which there is now some warping of the roof board. Also, the soffits have dropped and are moldy, there is some streaking coming from under the siding where the insulation was coming out, it looks as though the living room ceiling is sagging in one area, there are some light streaks in the ceiling in one of the bedrooms where it meets the outside wall, there is a spot on one of the other bedroom outside walls that won't take paint, the front porch is sunken in the front and 2 of the feaux support columns have fallen, the front of the house seems to have sunk, the gutters have been pulled out of place, etc., etc., etc. I am now to the point where all of the insulation is going to come out of the attic and a thorough look-see needs to take place up there.
Is this something that most insurance policies would cover or is the issue of maintenance going to be thrown at us. You can't take care of something that you don't know is occurring. If you inspect annually and all appears well, how would one know. I even have pictures of the house from the summer of '07 that shows all of the downspouts/elbows in place. The gutters look great, the porch supports are erect with no gapping at the top, the roof looks good with no curling at the edges nor waving of the boards as best can be seen. I was one for going on the roof every year with a gas driven blower to blow the tree seeds, leaves and such off the roof. The gutters are only about 2 years old and were in mint condition.
I've received a letter of denial stating that the attic was found by the structural engineer to be missing insulation between some of the rafters and that some of the soffits had insulation above them. From what little I can see from atop a ladder at the opening of the attic, the only insulation that was missing was above the unheated/non air conditioned garage. I have not gotten in the attic enough to really take a look at the soffit area. I do know this much, though, and that I did not have a problem with this until this last winter.
Sorry for the long post.
Do I have a leg to stand on here????What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)?
I have a rental and walked in on a real mess this last winter. The tenants vacated without notice. I found the damage really soon after they'd left. Plus, I have it set up that the utilities revert right back into my name so there would always be service to the place, so no problem there.
When I threw open the door, I saw that many of the walls had dropped from the ceiling in some places about as much as 1/2 an inch. They dropped as a result of the slab dropping. The house has a floating slab...no basement. We spent hundreds and hundreds of dollars trying to figure out if the cause was done by broken water lines under the slab. This never turned up anything.
I recently learned from the neighbor at the rental that the elbow from off of one of the downspouts was discovered missing and replaced upon discovery without me being told about any of it. Also, major ice damming kept occurring due to the bad winter and water would make its way down into the walls/foundation. Yes, it was an exceptionally bad winter AND it was also discovered by a heating contractor that 2 heat pipes for two of the bedrooms were loose and 20% of the heat was being lost into the attic above which there is now some warping of the roof board. Also, the soffits have dropped and are moldy, there is some streaking coming from under the siding where the insulation was coming out, it looks as though the living room ceiling is sagging in one area, there are some light streaks in the ceiling in one of the bedrooms where it meets the outside wall, there is a spot on one of the other bedroom outside walls that won't take paint, the front porch is sunken in the front and 2 of the feaux support columns have fallen, the front of the house seems to have sunk, the gutters have been pulled out of place, etc., etc., etc. I am now to the point where all of the insulation is going to come out of the attic and a thorough look-see needs to take place up there.
Is this something that most insurance policies would cover or is the issue of maintenance going to be thrown at us. You can't take care of something that you don't know is occurring. If you inspect annually and all appears well, how would one know. I even have pictures of the house from the summer of '07 that shows all of the downspouts/elbows in place. The gutters look great, the porch supports are erect with no gapping at the top, the roof looks good with no curling at the edges nor waving of the boards as best can be seen. I was one for going on the roof every year with a gas driven blower to blow the tree seeds, leaves and such off the roof. The gutters are only about 2 years old and were in mint condition.
I've received a letter of denial stating that the attic was found by the structural engineer to be missing insulation between some of the rafters and that some of the soffits had insulation above them. From what little I can see from atop a ladder at the opening of the attic, the only insulation that was missing was above the unheated/non air conditioned garage. I have not gotten in the attic enough to really take a look at the soffit area. I do know this much, though, and that I did not have a problem with this until this last winter.
Sorry for the long post.
Do I have a leg to stand on here????What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)?