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Selling a home with a dark secret can be tricky

In Little Italy in Boston, Massachusetts, where tourists juggle coffee and cannoli, there is a 3m-wide monument to revenge on the market that could be yours for US$1.2 million. It is a spite house. An unusual architectural phenomenon, the property was built not with hope and love, but with venom and Machiavellian planning, with the intention of irritating the neighbors. It was reportedly built in 1862 and was the product of a feud between two brothers who inherited land from their father. When one brother returned from the civil war, he found his battle-shy sibling had constructed his own home on the lion’s

Should sellers disclose a house s dark secret? In some states it s the law | Real estate

In a year of COVID-19 and low inventory, more Lancaster County homes selling sight-unseen

Earlier this month, Natalia Latsios listed a two-bedroom condo at 6 p.m. on a Sunday night. By early Monday afternoon, the Realtor with Century 21 Home Advisors in Lancaster had a cash offer at the full asking price of $178,500. She says it was from buyers who wanted the condo for a second home and were willing to waive inspection on a dwelling they’d only seen online. They had never stepped foot inside. “If that doesn’t show you what the market is like, then I don’t know what will,” Latsios says. At a time when demand for homes is far outpacing supply — not to mention one in which the pandemic is still a presence — buying sight-un(physically)seen is putting buyers, sellers and the professionals working with them in somewhat unfamiliar territory.

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