maybe flyn can explain to us while even real estate in florida is whacky

sickmint79

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Mar 2, 2008
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Man says Florida villa he bought at government auction turned out to be a foot-wide piece of land - Story | WFLD

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FOX NEWS - A man who snagged a $177,000 villa for $9,100 now believes he was scammed by the Florida county that put the property up for auction for unpaid property taxes.

The villa turns out to be a 1-foot-by-100-foot strip of land that separates two villas in Tamarac and is worth $50, the Sun Sentinel reports.

Broward County sold the parcel to Kerville Holness at an online auction of tax delinquent properties in March.

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The land, which holds two mailboxes, starts at the curb, goes under a wall separating the garages of two adjoining villas and then extends out to the back, the paper reported.

“If I’m vindictive enough, I can cut right through the garage wall and the home to get to my air space, but what use would that be to me?” Holness told the paper.

“It’s deception,” he added.

He asked Broward to void the deal and return his money. County officials say state law does not allow for refunds.

Holness said he submitted his bid based on property appraiser photos showing the villa as being the parcel, the Sun Sentinel reported.

The appraiser’s website and information on the county’s tax site show no villa or building value, according to the paper.

Officials don’t know why the developer never attached the strip to either of the adjoining properties. The developer defaulted on the property taxes after dissolving.
 

Flyn

Go ahead. I'll catch up.
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Mar 1, 2004
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Selling homes on the Gulf Coast of Florida
Yeah, I saw this in one of my real estate feeds.

It's Broward County (Miami) so corruption is high. They don't care about fairness.

The buyer was trying to scoop up a home for cheap and didn't do his due diligence. Looking up the property in the county records would have told him what it was.

If I was him, I'd try to sell it to the two homeowners and get my money back. He has leverage because they technically built their homes on his land. The
two homeowners could go after the builder, who is the one who initially screwed up, but it sounds like he may be out of business. Statute of limitations could come into play, too.

If the buyer and the homeowners can't come to some kind of deal, it's lawyer time.
 
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