i would never use the sellers surveyor, especially not if it is his boat. the buyer should have hired his own surveyor. i am with most here, sams should hear about it.
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i would never use the sellers surveyor, especially not if it is his boat. the buyer should have hired his own surveyor. i am with most here, sams should hear about it.
Sams does surveys?
as a new owner and new to this forum, it tok me a minute to figure out SAMS, the Society of Accredited Marine Surveyors® is not Sam's Marine, the host of this forum
Was it a houseboat?
It might have been. :D
I thought the same! Randy needs to be more specific. Plus this sounds like a BS group. " I read a boating book.I joine the club now I'm a surveyor!"
Here's their mission statement:
Objectives
Provide an organization complementary to the marine industry
Cooperate and encourage communications among members
Cooperate and encourage communications between members and other marine organizations
Assist other marine organizations in technical matters
Provide information and training for persons interested in the profession of Marine Surveying
Suggest standards for technical procedures for all members
Educate the public
BSBSBSBSBSBSBSBSBSBSBS
Lots of assumptions being made with little info. If he supplied a survey and intentionally left out or falsely reported defects he was aware of. Then he is a POS and might be liable. I doubt there is much legal recourse without a written survey and proof that he falsely reported on the boats condition.
I just ASSumed members of this forum would be familiar with SAMS vs SAM'S. So EXCUUUSE me! :p
Again, I don't know the particulars, and I didn't want to play 20 questions with someone who was watching their dream boat turn into a nightmare. I'll get more info and see who said what, but I just figured this would be a good place to get some input.
No doubt I would feel much better taking on a delivery job of an older boat if someone told me that while they didn't have much personal knowledge of their newly purchased vessel, the seller was a licensed surveyor who said things were fine. Yes, they should have hired their own surveyor or had a very experienced person inspect and sea trial the boat prior to purchase, but this was a low budget boat with a low budget buyer. It's just an unfortunate situation.
I have brokers ask me to do engine surveys on boats I service and I tell them no. I feel it is unethical and no matter how thorough a job, if there is a problem down the road I would not want to be the guy defending it.
Yes significant problems are required to be disclosed. But you also can't get blood out of the stone.
I think that this should have been a case of buyer beware. Who in their right mind would let a seller survey therir own boat?
I assume this is the same person who you had contact me? If so she was clueless and the few things she told me made me want to run. I offered to do a quick once over , but never heard back.
Why in the world buy a houseboat here instead of on the river close to home.