#72009 - 01/01/05 09:12 AM
Welcome to the Home Inspection Forum
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Member
Registered: 12/28/04
Posts: 73
Loc: Wisconsin
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Welcome to the new Home Inspection Forum. Realtors, home buyers/sellers feel free to ask questions regarding the home inspection industry from some experienced home inspectors throughout the country. Home inspectors, feel free to ask questions of Realtors regarding anything related to home inspection, or offer your advice to any post in here.
Rememer that this forum is searchable by the entire public.You agree, through your use of this service, that you will not use this BB to post any material which is knowingly false and/or defamatory, inaccurate, abusive, vulgar, hateful, harassing, obscene, profane, sexually oriented, threatening, invasive of a person's privacy, or otherwise violative of any law....
We hope you will find this forum helpful.
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#72010 - 04/21/05 10:32 AM
Re: Welcome to the Home Inspection Forum
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Member
Registered: 04/19/05
Posts: 168
Loc: COCOA, FLORIDA
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I believe everyone has their horror stories about inspectors who have caused contract problems. that being said, when you select and inspector that has E & O insurance, you have a better chance of a good inspection.
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#72011 - 04/21/05 10:49 AM
Re: Welcome to the Home Inspection Forum
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Moderator
Registered: 12/30/04
Posts: 241
Loc: San Diego CA
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I would definitely agree with you.
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#72013 - 06/14/05 02:46 PM
Re: Welcome to the Home Inspection Forum
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Moderator
Registered: 12/30/04
Posts: 241
Loc: San Diego CA
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Since I am human, there is always the possibility that even my most thorough home inspection will have an error or omission, perhaps from something as simple as leaving a default paragaph in the report when it has no bearing on the property.
My E&O insurance with Realtor Indemnity protects everyone involved--me, Client, and Realtor. As I like to tell my Clients, my E&O insurance protects both you from me and me from me.
Perhaps if I were working in South Texas where I grew up, I might believe diffeently. But here in San Diego, where a 640 SF shack in a bad part of town on 641 SF of land goes for $500,000, I really don't believe that my million/million E&O policy is adequate. Unfortunately, that's the maximum I've been able to find.
Since I do several $5-$10 million mansions each year, I would carry $5 million/$10 million E&O insurance if it were offered.
Where I work, I consider one to be a poor businessperson if one is working in the home inspection industry without E&O insurance, GL insurance, ADD insurance, life insurance, and workers' comp insurance. Just my own business protocols.
I also use my insurance as a marketing advantage against my competition. Insurance is not expensive, and since I'm not the least expensive home inspector, I don't mind telling my Clients, many of whom are price shopping (and I don't have any problem with price shoppers--I'm a home inspector working with all people), why I carry insurance and how that overhead affects my prices. I have never lost a price shopper once I explain insurance.
I also personally don't believe that it is the thorough inspection that will keep one out of court and, ergo, prevent use of one's E&O insurance. I believe education is much more important than the actual inspection results or report itself.
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#72015 - 06/15/05 06:00 AM
Re: Welcome to the Home Inspection Forum
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Moderator
Registered: 12/30/04
Posts: 241
Loc: San Diego CA
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Hold harmless clauses generally don't work unless all parties sign the contract holding all parties harmless. That generally isn't done. Too many courts have ruled that Party A (in this case, Buyer) and Party B (in this case, Inspector) cannot agree to hold harmless Party C (in this case, Realtor) unless Party C is a party to the contract, which they never are here in San Diego. That's the reason for buying E&O insurance with a Realtor Indemnity clause.
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