I recently purchased a property in January, the building survey I paid for indicated the possible presence of damp along the full length of the kitchen wall and suggested I enlist the services of a specialist, which I did.
The specialist's survey identified damp along half of the kitchen wall, and I queried with them the discrepancy between the two. Without checking further, the company sent me a quote for the full length.
Since the vendor had agreed to pay for the works, they queried the two invoices. Following up with the damp company, they reassured me that the original quote was sufficient and that the area in question was not affected. They also told my sales agent separately that they had provided the second quote only because I was asking for it.
Six months later, the area in question is clearly very badly affected by damp, however the company is now claiming that this area was never checked due to obstruction. It is true that a fridge was hiding this area and it is mentioned in their terms and conditions that they won't check behind obstructions.
However, my dispute is that given that I had made a point of querying the original discrepancy between the surveyor's report and theirs, I feel this was negligent to not have informed me that this area had in fact not been checked. If it had have been, I would of course made arrangements for it to be checked.
Furthermore, about 20% of the area in question was not obstructed in any way at the time, however they are claiming this was "low level readings" back in January.
They have offered to reduce the cost to remedy the area, however this will still cost me the greater part of £1,000 which could otherwise have been covered by the vendor.
The amount in question is not a terribly huge sum however I feel that I was very poorly advised and that their approach has been negligent, and I am loathe to just let them get away with it.
Would welcome suggestions as to viability of pursing this, and I should also mention that regrettably, I don't have a written record of the querying of the two surveys.
Thank you
The specialist's survey identified damp along half of the kitchen wall, and I queried with them the discrepancy between the two. Without checking further, the company sent me a quote for the full length.
Since the vendor had agreed to pay for the works, they queried the two invoices. Following up with the damp company, they reassured me that the original quote was sufficient and that the area in question was not affected. They also told my sales agent separately that they had provided the second quote only because I was asking for it.
Six months later, the area in question is clearly very badly affected by damp, however the company is now claiming that this area was never checked due to obstruction. It is true that a fridge was hiding this area and it is mentioned in their terms and conditions that they won't check behind obstructions.
However, my dispute is that given that I had made a point of querying the original discrepancy between the surveyor's report and theirs, I feel this was negligent to not have informed me that this area had in fact not been checked. If it had have been, I would of course made arrangements for it to be checked.
Furthermore, about 20% of the area in question was not obstructed in any way at the time, however they are claiming this was "low level readings" back in January.
They have offered to reduce the cost to remedy the area, however this will still cost me the greater part of £1,000 which could otherwise have been covered by the vendor.
The amount in question is not a terribly huge sum however I feel that I was very poorly advised and that their approach has been negligent, and I am loathe to just let them get away with it.
Would welcome suggestions as to viability of pursing this, and I should also mention that regrettably, I don't have a written record of the querying of the two surveys.
Thank you
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