Hi all- we have a primary home, and a secondary modest vacation home both in Pennsylvania, and both of which are experiencing issues due to developer improper construction.
Issue 1 (the bigger issue): We bought our modest vacation home in the Poconos PA area from a developer who rehabbed/flipped a house then sold it to us. Part of that rehab involved that developer redoing the main structural beam of the house. Well, now 5 years later it turns out they didn't do it properly (the span is too long and they didn't use enough concrete footers/columns to support the main beam along that long span) and now the beam is sagging and the house along with it. So, we are left with what will be a very expensive repair (cost to be likely $5-10k) due to a sagging house/main beam. Developer was under an LLC with an LLC name that doesn't appear to be tied to just this specific property, but not sure if the LLC is still active.
Issue 2: On our main home we're having water intrusion when it rains, from what we are told by contractors was an improper vinyl siding and drain box installation. House was built in 2012, sold to previous owners of the home, and then those owners sold it to us. Cost to fix will probably be at least $2k. The original developer was under an LLC, but not sure if the LLC is still active.
I've read the following article regarding similar issues many in PA and other states face when buying newly developed homes: http://archive.is/0rKgw , and that article references the following 12 year rule in PA: https://www.legis.state.pa.us/cfdocs/legis/LI/consCheck.cfm?txtType=HTM&ttl=42&div=0&chpt=55&sctn=36&subsctn=0
That being said, my questions are:
1) Does this law apply to just homes where the buyer agreed to purchase and then the home was built, or does it also cover homes already constructed/developed/rehabbed and then sold to buyers after? Does it apply to rehabbers, and not just ground-up home developers?
2) Does this law apply to buyers who did not buy directly from the developer, but second hand, even if it can be proven that the issues are related to developer improper construction?
3) Based on the first two questions, does it sound like I have legal recourse, and if so, what's the best way to go about this? Does it matter if the developer's LLC is no longer active?
Personally, I'd rather have the developers hire contractors to fix the issues rather than going through the court process, but would like to understand what my rights/leverage are first.
Thanks so much for any advice you can provide.
Issue 1 (the bigger issue): We bought our modest vacation home in the Poconos PA area from a developer who rehabbed/flipped a house then sold it to us. Part of that rehab involved that developer redoing the main structural beam of the house. Well, now 5 years later it turns out they didn't do it properly (the span is too long and they didn't use enough concrete footers/columns to support the main beam along that long span) and now the beam is sagging and the house along with it. So, we are left with what will be a very expensive repair (cost to be likely $5-10k) due to a sagging house/main beam. Developer was under an LLC with an LLC name that doesn't appear to be tied to just this specific property, but not sure if the LLC is still active.
Issue 2: On our main home we're having water intrusion when it rains, from what we are told by contractors was an improper vinyl siding and drain box installation. House was built in 2012, sold to previous owners of the home, and then those owners sold it to us. Cost to fix will probably be at least $2k. The original developer was under an LLC, but not sure if the LLC is still active.
I've read the following article regarding similar issues many in PA and other states face when buying newly developed homes: http://archive.is/0rKgw , and that article references the following 12 year rule in PA: https://www.legis.state.pa.us/cfdocs/legis/LI/consCheck.cfm?txtType=HTM&ttl=42&div=0&chpt=55&sctn=36&subsctn=0
That being said, my questions are:
1) Does this law apply to just homes where the buyer agreed to purchase and then the home was built, or does it also cover homes already constructed/developed/rehabbed and then sold to buyers after? Does it apply to rehabbers, and not just ground-up home developers?
2) Does this law apply to buyers who did not buy directly from the developer, but second hand, even if it can be proven that the issues are related to developer improper construction?
3) Based on the first two questions, does it sound like I have legal recourse, and if so, what's the best way to go about this? Does it matter if the developer's LLC is no longer active?
Personally, I'd rather have the developers hire contractors to fix the issues rather than going through the court process, but would like to understand what my rights/leverage are first.
Thanks so much for any advice you can provide.
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