Listing it after 3 years…very sneaky.
Good catch! Wasn’t aware of that at all… 
This should be included under the Case Study thread. Frankly, I would not touch this place if you gave it to me…
Death house back on market with staging!!!
https://www.redfin.com/CA/San-Francisco/1986-18th-Ave-94116/home/646018
why not?
Natural death is one thing, but when multiple people die unnecessarily due to inability to escape fire, well, can’t imagine the spirit of the home is full of positive energy. Pass!!!
spirit of home? didn’t know they had one 
Seller is nuts. You expect people to pay top dollar for a home where people died unnaturally. Drop the price sufficiently and just move on…
how long will you need to do it? if i were a buyer, when can i sell it for top dollar?
Dead is dead, i don’t understand why it affects anything.
Well, according to this, 3 years is the disclosure period but I believe if someone asks the question the seller/agent has the duty to fully disclose the circumstances. It is what it is. Maybe, one day you will find someone who could less but that is just not realistic. Dropping the price substantially obviously might work, or not…
I think the seller waited 3 years for this moment so she’s not going to compromise on the price. It’s an emotional process for her…
Multiple fires and they couldn’t escape? Forget the spirits, something’s wrong with the house…
Plus fire damage probably got covered up, not completely fixed.
It was the metal entrance door. Fire fighters had to waste 20 minutes to cut a hole to have access to the inside. They made the mistake of making their home too “secure”…
They’ve learned nothing from the ordeal… I see that the door is still there… spirits are trapped inside and they are not happy…
I used to worry about this when I visited my parents. They got robbed (once in 25 years) and put bars on the windows and door. You need a key to get out the door. Death trap. I think my brother finally convinced them to put the emergency releases on the windows… But good luck to them climbing out at age 70.
"CCCS 1710.2 makes an exception for deaths caused by acquired immune deficiency syndrome. Federal law classifies AIDS as a disability, so disclosure of someone’s death due to this cause is considered discriminatory. "
That seems like a bad exception to make. If someone died, you shouldn’t have to give the reason just “he was sick and died.” But then to not list the death and find out from the neighbors, then you ask why you weren’t told? Now you’re told it falls under this exception?? Now you know it’s an AIDS death.
What if a homosexual person died? Maybe we shouldn’t disclose that because could also be discriminatory…
Or if a straight right-wing Christian died in there. Could also be discriminatory.
But at least if you make more than one possibility, then you’ll be left guessing which it might be.
Correct. I believe they had used those double keyed deadbolt locks on the gate. Seconds matter…
Emotional or not, she is just plain greedy I am sorry to say. No one, no one is going to pay top dollar for a house with a checkered past. She should ask herself this, would she buy this house at X price given the circumstances? I believe the answer is a resounding NO!!!