Buyers Want Your Home for As Little As Possible. Quickly Find Out What It's Really Worth, by Email, for Free.  Are you thinking of selling your Middletown, Port Jervis and Glen Spey area home? You should know exactly what it's worth before making such an important decision. Let us do a quick "Comparative Market Analysis" for you, for free, and with no obligation. Also known as a CMA, this analysis compares your home to others that are currently on the market and to those that have recently sold. As real estate agents, we determine the value of Middletown, Port Jervis and Glen Spey, New York area homes daily. Using the information you provide below, we can perform a quick market analysis, and give you a free estimate of what your home is worth in today's market. Remember, market conditions can be different, even one Middletown, Port Jervis and Glen Spey area neighborhood to the next. We know how to take all these factors into account when determining the true market value of your home. This service is completely free and without obligation. There are absolutely no strings attached. Why? We want the chance to show you our expertise as Middletown, Port Jervis and Glen Spey area real estate agents. Please provide us with some basic information on your home.  What's your home or property really worth? Accurately pricing Middletown, Port Jervis and Glen Spey area real estate is our job! Let us do a market analysis for YOUR property. There's no obligation, it's FREE, and we promise to get back to you quickly... 
Disclosure Laws >Disclaimer Clauses
Before the professional inspects the home that you are buying, you will be asked to sign an acknowledgment of the scope of the inspection. This document will probably include a disclaimer clause designed to relieve the company of responsibility if they should miss a defect. What happens if a defect is missed during an inspection?
The disclaimer clause may get the inspection company off the hook for a defect if there is no visual indication of a problem. If the inspector clearly indicated that he was not checking for that problem--many inspectors do not check for dry rot or inspect roofs--then the recourse will be limited. If negligence is involved, or if the defect should have been obvious to a professional inspector, the disclaimer is not likely to protect the inspector. If you find an undiscovered defect, discuss the matter with the inspector. Depending on the situation, the responsibility for remedying the problem may rest with you, the sellers, and/or the inspector.
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| Q |
What was the world's highest viewing platform before the opening of the Empire State Building in 1939?
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| A |
The Eiffel Tower, built between 1887-1889, was for 42 years the highest viewing platform in a man-made structure. |
See More Real Estate Trivia > |
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