The record-setting flooding we saw in Walworth, Racine, and
Kenosha counties brings to mind an important disclosure topic for real estate
transactions… but first, our thoughts and hearts at Wynn at Law, LLC go out to
everyone impacted by the flooding. We hope things return to normal for all of
you as quickly as possible.
In some of our earlier articles we’ve talked about real estate
disclosures. Flood damage is one of those things that must be disclosed by the
seller before the transaction. Specifically, the form asks if the property
owner was ‘aware’ of ‘any’ past flooding. It’s difficult for anyone to not be
‘aware’ of the current flooding, the worst in history. The issue is the word
‘any.’ If a seller knew of flooding back in 2008, it has to be disclosed. If
the sellers know the property flooded in 1973 – another historic flood event in
our area – even if the homeowner didn’t live there, it has to be disclosed.
Past transactions on the real estate can identify flooding
disclosures that happened before the current one.
Sellers should fully explain the circumstances behind any
flooding damage and give as much accurate detail as possible. If it only
happened once, say so. If it only happened in the record-smashing deluge we
just went through, say so. Most importantly, in the disclosure, you can be very
specific about the cleanup and repairs you made, as well as any steps you took
to (hopefully) prevent the next massive downpour from causing the same damage
this downpour created.
If a property was on the market before the rivers
overflowed, the previous disclosure from before the flood might be inaccurate.
In that case, the disclosure should be amended.
Both the buyer’s and seller’s attorney (and their real
estate agents, too) have legal responsibilities related to the disclosure form.
As fiduciaries, they are bound to advise their clients with entire openness. This
requirement applies even if the seller just doesn’t want to disclose the
current flooding because, ‘It was once in a lifetime and will never happen
again and this will sabotage my sale or selling price.’
Does a buyer have to abort plans to buy a house just because
it is or was ever in a flood? Of course not. Flooding in an extraordinary event
like the one we’ve just seen does not mean the property will flood in every
storm. If this storm tells us anything, it’s that even extraordinary records
can fall.
*The content and material
in this original post is for informational purposes only and does not
constitute legal advice.
Photo by Scott Stevens, used with permission.
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