
October 25, 2008
When it comes to property's paranormal history, it's buyer beware
In the real estate field, when the value of a house is, or could be,
affected by a history of murder, suicide, ghosts, hauntings or other unexplained
happenings, it is said to be stigmatized.
This may occur when the real estate becomes psychologically affected or
tainted, even if the perception is based on non-physical, non-scientific or even
irrational perceptions.
In the marketplace, the big issue has always been whether there is an
obligation to disclose the nature and existence of the stigma to potential
buyers.
In the early 1980s Dorris Reed purchased a house in California from Robert
King. Neither King nor his real estate agents told Reed that a woman and her
four children were murdered there 10 years earlier. Reed learned of the gruesome
episode from a neighbour after she moved in. She discovered that no one wanted
to buy the house because of the stigma, and sued to set aside the sale. The
California Court of Appeals ruled in Reed's favour, declaring that there was a
duty to disclose facts known or accessible only to the seller if the information
has a significant, measurable effect on market value.
Quoting Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice (Act 2, Scene 2), the
judge said, "Truth will come to light; murder cannot be hid long."
Shortly afterward, California became the first state to pass a law defining
the disclosure responsibility of an owner and real estate agent when selling
stigmatized property. The law requires an agent to disclose the fact of a murder
on the property for a period of three years after the event.
A similar case occurred in 1989 when bond trader Jeffrey Stambovsky put a
deposit on a $650,000 house overlooking the Hudson River in Nyack, N.Y. Unknown
to him, the vendor had published stories in Reader's Digest about the
home's ghost, a cheerful little fellow in a revolutionary war uniform. The house
had also been included in local walking tours and described as a "riverfront
Victorian (with ghost)."
The court said the real estate broker, as agent for the seller, was "under no
duty to disclose to a potential buyer the phantasmal reputation of the
premises," and admitted that Stambovsky hadn't a "ghost of a chance" of proving
fraud.
Nevertheless, Stambovsky got his deposit back because the house had a
prominent reputation and the non-disclosure of its history struck at the very
essence of the contract between buyer and seller due to the reduced value of the
house.
The lesson to be learned from the Nyack case is that if the public believes
it to be real, it is real – whether the ghost exists or not.
About half of all American states have laws requiring disclosure of property
stigma, as does Quebec. Disclosure rules in the rest of Canada, including
Ontario, are weak, and in general, the rule is caveat emptor, or buyer beware.
Barry Lebow is a Toronto land economist, arbitrator and educator who lectures
on haunted and stigmatized houses. He believes Ontario law should be amended to
protect buyers and require disclosure of paranormal happenings. Frequently, says
Lebow, the realtor becomes the ``fall guy'' for failing to disclose the history
of a house, even if the seller is not totally honest with the listing agent.
There is no shortage of haunted houses in Ontario. In his 1996 book,
Haunted Toronto, and in his newly released The Big Book of Canadian
Ghost Stories, John Robert Colombo details the locations of many haunted
properties, inhabited by made-in-Canada ghosts. For the whereabouts of more
haunted premises, I also recommend torontoghosts.org, the website of the Toronto
and Ontario Ghosts and Hauntings Research Society.
Bob Aaron is a Toronto real estate lawyer. He can be reached by email
at bob@aaron.ca, phone 416-364-9366 or
fax 416-364-3818. Visit the column archives at
http://aaron.ca/columns/toronto-star-index.htm
for articles on this and other topics.
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