Legal Question in Real Estate Law in California

Disclosure-statue of limitations

We sold a house that the buyer is saying we failed to disclose the carpet was saturated with urine. We deny any such claim and she lived in the house for over 4 months before she threatened to take us to court if we didn't reimburse her for her expenses. She surrendered some of the receipts after 8 months and did not provide any proof to her claims, but keeps badgering us for money. What is the statue of limitations in which she has to file a suit agains us for this type of dispute? Is there any statue of limitations if she goes to mediation/arbitration rather than court?


Asked on 3/18/08, 2:19 pm

2 Answers from Attorneys

Roy Hoffman Law Offices of Roy A. Hoffman

Re: Disclosure-statue of limitations

The statute of limitation applies regardless of whether mediation, arbitration or a lawsuit are involved. Depending upon the theory of recovery, the statute of limitation could be two, three or four years.

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Answered on 3/18/08, 3:00 pm
Mitchell Roth MW Roth, Professional Law Corporation

Re: Disclosure-statue of limitations

Too long to be of any use to you now. Tell her no and let her sue. She probably won't.

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Answered on 3/18/08, 9:29 pm


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