ok, i bought this house in june 06 within florida, it had a recent appendix done on the house that looked really good and i have bough the house with the plan to do another accessory than re-sell it, well i go to the permit organization to take out a area monopoly and it turns out the previous owner built the old accessory wrong and without proper permit, it was so feebly built the city told me it has to be torn down and rebuilit, i tried to sue the previous owner, cant, i tried to sue the city for failing to up hold inspections and not tear it down, and i cant, i cant re-sell this house but i cant fix it(it would be way to costly) so im thinking roughly just abondoning it and going to canada, what would be the consequences? would they ever find me within canada. seiously, this thread is no joke.
thankfulness for all the comfort
Answers: If you don't pay the property taxes on it, the town will eventually take it and auction it off.
You will also be responsible for upkeep. You may receive frequent fines related to weeds/umkempt property.
Finally, if someone injures themselves on the property you could be named within a lawsuit, especially if the neglect of the property cause the injury.
you dont have to run of late stop paying the taxes on it and eventually the government will sieze it and auction it bad to get their taxes lol abandon anything has consequences. You enjoy a name and social protection number so they will find you regardless and even though it may not be right away, it will bite you later. I read out just fix the house regardless of cost and after you can resell it that way. It seem that is the lone choice you have unless you can own someone buy it from you for a dollar (that type of deal) and see where that lead.
You need an attorney. This is a official issue between the former owner/seller, their agent, your agent and both brokers.
Someone needs to earnings for whatever requests to be done, and it shouldn't be you, unless you signed a contract with an "as-is" afterthought? Did you? If you did, then you are kinda stuck between a rock and a intricate place. Because if you don't tear it down, the city will do it for you and bill your taxes.
Again, I would purchase an attorney and sue.
As for going to Canada, well it's your choice, but adjectives that will happen is your credit will be toast for 7 years and it will be difficult for you to buy another home. Even if you do to Canada. Your credit follows you to demise!
find an investor to buy it as a shortsale from you.
list it near a realtor explain to them the problem, they should have a schedule of investors that deal next to these sort of problem.
or a deed within lieu where you grant the bank put a bet on the title of the home.
It will show as a foreclosure on your credit. They will sell it for what they can acquire & you will owe the difference. They won't chase you down it just ruins your credit.
thankfulness for all the comfort
Answers: If you don't pay the property taxes on it, the town will eventually take it and auction it off.
You will also be responsible for upkeep. You may receive frequent fines related to weeds/umkempt property.
Finally, if someone injures themselves on the property you could be named within a lawsuit, especially if the neglect of the property cause the injury.
you dont have to run of late stop paying the taxes on it and eventually the government will sieze it and auction it bad to get their taxes lol abandon anything has consequences. You enjoy a name and social protection number so they will find you regardless and even though it may not be right away, it will bite you later. I read out just fix the house regardless of cost and after you can resell it that way. It seem that is the lone choice you have unless you can own someone buy it from you for a dollar (that type of deal) and see where that lead.
You need an attorney. This is a official issue between the former owner/seller, their agent, your agent and both brokers.
Someone needs to earnings for whatever requests to be done, and it shouldn't be you, unless you signed a contract with an "as-is" afterthought? Did you? If you did, then you are kinda stuck between a rock and a intricate place. Because if you don't tear it down, the city will do it for you and bill your taxes.
Again, I would purchase an attorney and sue.
As for going to Canada, well it's your choice, but adjectives that will happen is your credit will be toast for 7 years and it will be difficult for you to buy another home. Even if you do to Canada. Your credit follows you to demise!
find an investor to buy it as a shortsale from you.
list it near a realtor explain to them the problem, they should have a schedule of investors that deal next to these sort of problem.
or a deed within lieu where you grant the bank put a bet on the title of the home.
It will show as a foreclosure on your credit. They will sell it for what they can acquire & you will owe the difference. They won't chase you down it just ruins your credit.