QUOTE(shaniandras2787 @ Apr 14 2017, 11:17 AM)
1) if represented differently then have your solicitor write to the Vendor's solicitors to ask them hold the release of the whatever balance due to the Vendor pending the rectification of the toilet which the Vendor has agreed, state the date.
2) "as is where is basis" means you are buying whatever you are seeing on the date, there's no arguing otherwise, this means you are eff'd if the Vendor insist on adhering to the agreement.
3) there should be a clause in the agreement allowing the solicitors to only release the monies to the Vendor after all payments that are to be paid by the Vendor has been paid, not complying amounts to a breach to the terms and stakeholders' duty.
4) you cannot disagree/disallow/prevent the Vendor's contractor to rectify the defect so as long as the quality will be reverted back to how its original state was, if you deliberately stop this rectification because of no good reason then it will be admitted that you prevented the Vendor from carrying out his good will to rectify, adverse inference against you.
QUOTE(jchong @ Apr 14 2017, 12:27 PM)
From the posts above, the TS mentioned that the defect was not present when she viewed the house. But upon taking VP, she saw the defect. In this case can argue about it right?
QUOTE(jchong @ Apr 14 2017, 12:32 PM)
Since you plan to renovate the whole toilet, there is actually not going to be a real loss for you because in your renovation you might be retiling or repatching that area anyway.
Of course if you can claw back some costs from the vendor it is a bonus for you. If that is the case, then propose a reasonable sum to the vendor and get him to agree.
So far the vendor still did not reply to your message about the cost?
QUOTE(shaniandras2787 @ Apr 14 2017, 12:43 PM)
Hardly you can argue because "as is where is basis" is to be taken and interpreted literally. What you see is what you get*. There's no warranty in the agreement that the Property will be substantially in the same state nature and condition as at the date of inspection.
Thanks all for your feedback.
We have managed to come to an agreed term - to offset the apportionment amount due to him (much lesser to the amount we requested for the fix, well at least better than nothing)
how many actually face this kind of situation during handover? my lawyer said she has never encountered such problem during handover.. from the date we signed the offer letter, til the date of handover, many things can happen during these few months, in our case the pipe leakage and thus the hacking of the wall
Does that mean the purchaser should actually take good pictures of the house before signing the offer letter? Just to prove the state of the house when the agreement was made? and after proving so, who determines what amount is fair? the clause on this is very vague