Follow-up Inspectors: Don’t Ruin Your Credibility
I get a lot of mail from home inspectors offering their services, should the need ever arise, as expert witnesses in negligence cases against home inspectors. Fortunately, I never have a need for their expertise because the home inspection claims that I get asked to squash almost all go away secondary to a compellingly written letter that explains a. why the claimant has no case, despite what his expert claims; b. why, even if he had a case, he has no damages; c. why, even if he had a case and had damages, his claim would be barred because of his own conduct; d. why, even if he had a case and had damages and his claim were not barred due to his own conduct, his recovery would be contractually limited; e. that the claim, if brought, will be vigorously defended; and f. the retaliatory action that will ensue following the certain defeat of the claim.
Nevertheless, I do get to see a lot of reports from would-be “experts” for claimants. Usually, these individuals are not experts at all – that is they were not hired to give an “expert opinion” on established facts. They are merely professionals re-inspecting the same property several weeks and often several months after the original inspection and not infrequently after the massive destructive probing that first allowed the defect to be, literally, “uncovered.”
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