. Trust your Agent. That is what he/she gets paid for. Mention to the seller, that the “Seller Property Disclosure Statement” lessens the Sellers liability after the sale.
In Arizona there is no law requiring Seller disclosures, but your contract does require, unless taken out. So if you wanted to be a pain you could send a Cure notice, that is if you want out of the contract. If not, then do the inspections and go on with the deal. Your choice.
Best of luck.. - Thu May 15 2008, 12:41
The restrictions may not be in the zoning but in the CC&Rs. You need to trust your agent or get a new one. Ask him/her if you could see the restrictions, either municipal, HOA, or deed restrictions. Give them a chance to prove their worth and provide the information. - Thu May 15 2008, 08:54
If your offer had an expiration date, which it should you don't need to do anything. After the offer is expired (not delivered to you) you are not in contract. Also you may look at the dates on the contract usually the inspection period starts the day of acceptance. That is the day the offer is signed and a copy given to you. So, if written correctly you should have 10 days after that event. Read your Offer to Purchase, if you wrote it on a standard Arizona Association of Realtor’s contract it should be very easy to discern. - Mon May 12 2008, 22:57
If you are referring to selling equitable title or assigning contracts for a profit. Yes it is legal. Get an attorney though because it can be tricky. - Sun May 11 2008, 22:31
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