Home settling and setup responsibilities
Posted: Thu Feb 23, 2006 7:57 am
I have lived in my Palm Harbor manufactured home for almost 2 years now, and although I got the perfect home I wanted at the time, one thing has continued to be a thorn in my side. Almost since I first moved in the floor seam on the marriage line (a doublewide), has become uneven. It was one of those things that you just happen upon one day, wonder to yourself "hmm", and continue walking. Well, it eventually got worse, with the carpet showing a distinct line as one side of the house seemed to settle lower than the other.
At about 6 months after moving in, I "invited" a representative each from my dealer and the company that installed/setup the house out to see what was blatantly becoming lasting damage to my new home. Essentially the consensus from the "experts" was that it was normal settling. Within a few weeks, to seemingly remedy the issue, someone was sent out from the setup company to intall some lagbolts under the floor (from the visit came the realization that over 20 lagbolts had not been installed in the marriage line, which would tell me that my house wasn't put together correctly in the beginning), and another crew appeared to pull up my carpets and putty the uneven seam which was supposed to even it out smooth, or so I got from the explanation.
It is now 18+ months later, and everything has gotten worse. The floor seam is still uneven along the entire marriage line, at many points along the ceiling seam the line seems to be separating (leaving gaps in the seam covering of 1/8-1/4 inch), and on the master bedroom side of the house the outer wall has cracked, again along the marriage line, from top to bottom, with the biggest gap near the ceiling nearing 3/8 inch wide.
The question I pose is what can I do. I have tried to call the maintenance branch of the manufacturer, which due to convenient "staff changes" have failed to address this problem despite calls every week for almost 3 months straight. I have spoken to the dealer's office numerous times and continue to get the answer "it's normal settling, and we don't cover that after installation", when I get an answer or call back at all. I fear that this will be irreparable damage to my home, hurting even more should I end up selling it a few years down the road.
Do I have legal grounds to go after any of the aforementioned groups for damages, or am I just stuck with it all? Maybe fork out the money for leveling and an inspection and go from there? What can I do?
Thank you for your time.
Matt
At about 6 months after moving in, I "invited" a representative each from my dealer and the company that installed/setup the house out to see what was blatantly becoming lasting damage to my new home. Essentially the consensus from the "experts" was that it was normal settling. Within a few weeks, to seemingly remedy the issue, someone was sent out from the setup company to intall some lagbolts under the floor (from the visit came the realization that over 20 lagbolts had not been installed in the marriage line, which would tell me that my house wasn't put together correctly in the beginning), and another crew appeared to pull up my carpets and putty the uneven seam which was supposed to even it out smooth, or so I got from the explanation.
It is now 18+ months later, and everything has gotten worse. The floor seam is still uneven along the entire marriage line, at many points along the ceiling seam the line seems to be separating (leaving gaps in the seam covering of 1/8-1/4 inch), and on the master bedroom side of the house the outer wall has cracked, again along the marriage line, from top to bottom, with the biggest gap near the ceiling nearing 3/8 inch wide.
The question I pose is what can I do. I have tried to call the maintenance branch of the manufacturer, which due to convenient "staff changes" have failed to address this problem despite calls every week for almost 3 months straight. I have spoken to the dealer's office numerous times and continue to get the answer "it's normal settling, and we don't cover that after installation", when I get an answer or call back at all. I fear that this will be irreparable damage to my home, hurting even more should I end up selling it a few years down the road.
Do I have legal grounds to go after any of the aforementioned groups for damages, or am I just stuck with it all? Maybe fork out the money for leveling and an inspection and go from there? What can I do?
Thank you for your time.
Matt