What's that noise?
found in the archives and never published
Written Feb 2012
Written Feb 2012
Hello Friends.
Those of you who follow this blog, and who are not incarcerated, need to
find something better to do. But, if you
are a reader, you may know that when I am not gallivanting around the globe, I
invest in income producing real estate back near where I live. I buy foreclosed homes as a way to diversify
my money away from the stock market. I
don’t like having all my investments under the control of some fat cat banker
or greedy stock broker. I would rather
be the fat and greedy one and control my investments personally.
At the time of the incident to be discussed here, I had purchased four
single family homes that had been foreclosures.
I fixed them up, and leased them out.
I have not had any major problems yet and I have been doing it for three years now.
A new foreclosure came on to the market that I was
interested in. It was a very nice little
home in a typical middle income neighborhood.
It was all brick, three bedrooms, two baths and had a nice back yard and
was on a quiet street. It had been
recently painted on the outside and the inside looked good. I planned to re-paint the inside and put in
new carpet. It should have been a
painless, low cost rehab. Since I am a
guy, I think about the mechanical components of a house more than the floor plan or paint
colors. This means I focus on the HVAC system (This house had a new one) and plumbing: This house had copper water pipes which indicated
to me that the original builder put in more quality in to this home than a home
that just used galvanized steel water pipe.
The day I was supposed to finalize the purchase of this
house I decided to swing by the property to check it out one more time. I discovered that the outside air conditioner
compressor was missing. Thieves had
stolen it. All that was left was the
small concrete pad that it sat on. Crap! That was a problem. I made a few frantic phone calls to see what it would cost
me to replace the outside unit. The
prices ranged from $500 for a used unit, to $2,900 if the inside unit had to be
replaced to match the new outside unit.
Crap again!
I had my Real Estate
agent tell the seller, a big fat cat banker, that if they did not lower the
price by $3,500, the purchase was off.
They came back with their counter-offer, which was a $500 reduction. I came back with a $2,000 lower price. The seller acquiesced to my stern demands and
reduced the price by $2,000. HA! Now I could buy a $500 used A/C unit for the
house and have an extra $1500 to use for putting more tile flooring in the house. What a wheeler-dealer I was! So, I signed all the paperwork, and now owned
this cute little house.
It was a few days later before I had a chance to go inside
the property. I was showing the house to
my wife when, as luck would have it, the city water dept. worker stopped by and
turned on the water for us. We suddenly
heard a loud gushing sound. My wife and
I look at each other. “What’s that
noise?” It sounded like a water hose
blasting the wall in the garage.
I ran outside. The City
worker said he turned the water back off since there was water pouring out of
the attic and running down the outside brick.
NOT GOOD. I was astonished. I went in to the garage and saw that the
water heater had been pulled away from the wall and all the copper pipes and
connections to it were cut and mangled.
The power cable to it was also severed.
What on earth could have caused that?
How weird! But that did not
explain why water would be coming out of the attic.
I pulled down the retractable stairway and scrambled up in
to the dark attic. My flashlight zeroed
in on the area where the water would have been pouring out. Everything was soaked. The insulation looked like a giant serving of
over cooked linguini. The sheet rock had
a half inch of water puddled up on it.
And I suddenly realized that the source of the water leak was a ragged
stub of copper pipe sticking out of the ceiling rafters. I looked around and realized that all the copper pipe in the attic was gone. Every bit of it. And most of the copper electrical wires that
crisscrossed the attic were gone too. I
was dumbstruck.
I slowly crawled back down the stairs. My wife was standing in the garage, anxiously
waiting for an explanation. I could
hardly spit out the results of my examination.
I told her what I found and she was dumbstruck too. That often happens to her when I open my
mouth, but that is something she has learned to handle, with the help of her
psychologist.
So, fast forward a few days later. I found a plumber who could quickly replace the
piping system. Then I found an
electrician to replace and repair the damaged electrical wiring. Then I had to replace the water heater and
rewire it. The last item was to replace
the outside A/C unit and repair the damaged inside unit. All total, the cost for all these repairs were
around $5,000. Ouch. That $2,000 I got deducted from the house
price looks very inadequate right now.
The pathetic thing is that the thieves probably got less than $50 bucks
for the scrap copper.
One of the contractors told me that the police were taking this
sort of crime seriously, so I called the sheriff's office. A sheriff came out and took some
basic information from me. He asked why
I didn’t report the crime as soon as it happened. I told him I thought it was a waste of
time. I asked him what they would be
doing to investigate. He said they were
too short handed to investigate, and it would be a waste of time. Arrrrgh.
But this tale did have a happy ending. My wife and I installed a lovely tile floor
in the kitchen and entry. The painter
did a great job patching the holes that the plumber had to cut in the walls to
connect new pipe to the un-stolen pipe.
And, best of all, I found a nice family to move in and make a home out
of the house. They hope to buy it one
day. I just hope we don’t have to call
the plumber, electrician, or the police again.
But I make no prediction about whether my wife should call her psychologist.
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