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Chuck Gould wrote:
Precisely. The surveyor reports to the buyer. Yes, and many brokers will try to bend the process as far as possible. From "helping" the buyer select a surveyor, to hovering over the buyer while the survey is in progress, to getting copies of the survey report and red-pencil-ing. Not necessarily dishonest but not really straight either. ... If the buyer chooses to use the "satisfactory survey" escape clause, all he or she need to is to say "sorry, but the survey was not satisfactory". This has to be rather carefully worded if you want it to stand up in court. Satsifactory to whom? What conditions are deemed satisfactory? If written properly, the buyer can get out of the contract on rather vague grounds, like saying he doesn't like the way the boat handles at low speed, or hits waves funny. If written improperly, the buyer can lose his deposit & his chance to buy the boat and get a quick lesson in how to be polite to a local judge. It's a bit less formalized than buying a house, but less informal than buying a car. The problem is that really interesting boats are invariably far away from one's home. Fresh Breezes- Doug King |
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