I get rid of "stuff" at the scrap yard the same way, but get paid for its weightShit, our guys will take whatever I leave as long as it fits in a can they can pick up with the robot arm on the truck. Even with the bulk pick up, I've never once seen them get out of the crane truck and inspect it. They just drive up, swing the grapple over and take it all at once. I've gotten rid of a ton of "stuff" by just piling other crap on top of it.

As the guy that does what I do for a living, remove all these pics and stories long before you sell the place. No how much you now what you have done is right, any sleaze bag real estate attorney could easily use all of it that you have intimate knowledge of the home and any defect that they find later.

I get it, but not worried. I'm not knowingly doing anything thats not 100. In 99% of cases anytime I touch anything I go above code. Ex.: I put in Comfortbat fire rated insulation and 19/32 plywood. Could of gotten away with crappy fiberglass that burns and 3/8" plywood for half the cost. That said and no matter how bad I want out of here - I'm not going to change who I am just to put some lipstick on this pig for a unethical sale.
House is being sold as is and all work has gubment permits being pulled with gubment inspections approved.
All above the table here & I know thats not the point but it is mine. You're giving great advice, I just choose to dismiss it based on my old profession. I already live with enough anxiety - can't be concerned about this or the truck being online.
I also plan on having my own 'home inspection' when I have caught all I can so I can fix whatever they find. I already reviewed my checklist from the inspection when I bought as a guide for what I need to keep an eye on. Most of that crap is little stuff I wouldn't know to look for - I can see the major issues
Save this post so if I have issues 4 months from now you can re-quote it and give me the "I told you so" story so it sinks in next time![]()
I had an agent that worked for me that had a client that replaced his tub faucet. The home sold for $1 million. it sat on a 25 x 75 lot. The 500 sf 'home' was a 1930s beach home with 2x4s as floor joists. When they took out the bathtub they saw 'black mold.' When talking with the neighbors, the neighbor said that he helped the seller replace the faucet. Long story short, the buyer was awarded $125k for failure to disclose. I have seen master carpenters been hosed by douchebags. I guess I am super jaded and do everything in my power to protect my clients. That's all.
Just know that I am jaded and do my best to help people from getting hosed.Apples/oranges in my mind, but I get that the moral is the same and applies.
I'd be happy if I walked out with 125k from the sale alone ~ I have HUD housing with tarps on the roofs in my neighborhood.
Been managing commercial construction projects almost my entire adult life and avoiding all those pitfalls through a very basic code.
Use superior products, be truthful but guarded, use good labor practices, and document everything all the time.
and if a window and door guy does his windows and doors wrong - he deserves to get sued. no one knows about leaky walls more than the guy who always gets blamed for them even though 99.9% of the time the window's not the issue
Just know that I am jaded and do my best to help people from getting hosed.

