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[email protected] January 26th 08 04:33 AM

Home Roofing claim
 
Hi,

I had the roof of my house replaced by a construction company due to
hail damage. The damage was covered by my home insurance policy less
the deductible.

6 months later I have a leak in the ceiling of one of my bedrooms. We
have not settled the charges with the construction company yet, as my
mortgage company needs to get involved in endorsing the checks from my
insurance company and this has taken time.

Do I inform the mortgage company of the leaks in the ceiling? Is
there any value in letting the mortgage company know of this issue?

Any insight would be appreciated.


Doug Brown January 26th 08 04:58 AM

Home Roofing claim
 
Well I think that I would certainly notify my insurance company and the
roofer. If the mortgage company is still holding up payment to the
contractor I would also notify them - can't see how it would hurt. Also, by
the way, I would not pay the deductible to the roofer.
wrote in message
...
Hi,

I had the roof of my house replaced by a construction company due to
hail damage. The damage was covered by my home insurance policy less
the deductible.

6 months later I have a leak in the ceiling of one of my bedrooms. We
have not settled the charges with the construction company yet, as my
mortgage company needs to get involved in endorsing the checks from my
insurance company and this has taken time.

Do I inform the mortgage company of the leaks in the ceiling? Is
there any value in letting the mortgage company know of this issue?

Any insight would be appreciated.




SteveB[_2_] January 26th 08 09:35 AM

Home Roofing claim
 

wrote in message
...
Hi,

I had the roof of my house replaced by a construction company due to
hail damage. The damage was covered by my home insurance policy less
the deductible.

6 months later I have a leak in the ceiling of one of my bedrooms. We
have not settled the charges with the construction company yet, as my
mortgage company needs to get involved in endorsing the checks from my
insurance company and this has taken time.

Do I inform the mortgage company of the leaks in the ceiling? Is
there any value in letting the mortgage company know of this issue?

Any insight would be appreciated.


Document, document, document.

The obvious question, have you called the contractor and told him? Maybe it
was a falling limb, some wind damage or a frozen turd from a passing jet
liner that caused the new leak. It is possible he did his work, and this is
actually new damage. Have him state what the problem is and what it will
cost to fix it. If it IS his bad work, he's going to want to fix it and get
paid. If it's new damage, he's going to want to document it and show he did
his job and something new happened.

Write registered letters to all involved, stating that the roof is still
leaking. That way, the roofer can't say that you didn't tell him. The
insurance company is aware that the roof is not fixed and therefore the
fixer should not be paid until the roof doesn't leak. And the mortgage
company knows that there is a yet unidentified issue because the contractor
can file a lien for nonpayment with the mortgage company. (His story is
that he did work and you were a deadbeat and didn't pay the bill.) (Or he
can say he fixed the old damage, and this is new, and has nothing to do with
the old.) And he might be right. So give him a chance to make it right, or
find the problem. If he stalls, you might also tell the contractor that you
are confused as to what to do, and are thinking of just calling the State
Contractor Board and letting them straighten it all out. Try to get all
interested parties involved so that they can establish who is responsible
for what. The contractor wants to get paid. The insurance company wants to
stamp the file CLOSED. The mortgage company wants no liens. You want your
roof fixed. Sounds like everyone is headed to the same destination.

HTH

Steve



[email protected] January 26th 08 01:54 PM

Home Roofing claim
 
On Jan 26, 4:35*am, "SteveB" wrote:
wrote in message

...

Hi,


I had the roof of my house replaced by a construction company due to
hail damage. *The damage was covered by my home insurance policy less
the deductible.


6 months later I have a leak in the ceiling of one of my bedrooms. *We
have not settled the charges with the construction company yet, as my
mortgage company needs to get involved in endorsing the checks from my
insurance company and this has taken time.


Do I inform the mortgage company of the leaks in the ceiling? *Is
there any value in letting the mortgage company know of this issue?


Any insight would be appreciated.


Document, document, document.

The obvious question, have you called the contractor and told him? *Maybe it
was a falling limb, some wind damage or a frozen turd from a passing jet
liner that caused the new leak. *It is possible he did his work, and this is
actually new damage. *Have him state what the problem is and what it will
cost to fix it. *If it IS his bad work, he's going to want to fix it and get
paid. *If it's new damage, he's going to want to document it and show he did
his job and something new happened.

Write registered letters to all involved, stating that the roof is still
leaking. *That way, the roofer can't say that you didn't tell him. *The
insurance company is aware that the roof is not fixed and therefore the
fixer should not be paid until the roof doesn't leak. *And the mortgage
company knows that there is a yet unidentified issue because the contractor
can file a lien for nonpayment with the mortgage company. *(His story is
that he did work and you were a deadbeat and didn't pay the bill.) *(Or he
can say he fixed the old damage, and this is new, and has nothing to do with
the old.) *And he might be right. *So give him a chance to make it right, or
find the problem. *If he stalls, you might also tell the contractor that you
are confused as to what to do, and are thinking of just calling the State
Contractor Board and letting them straighten it all out. *Try to get all
interested parties involved so that they can establish who is responsible
for what. *The contractor wants to get paid. *The insurance company wants to
stamp the file CLOSED. *The mortgage company wants no liens. *You want your
roof fixed. *Sounds like everyone is headed to the same destination.

HTH

Steve


And of course the big unknown in all this is whether this is one small
isolated problem at the one area that is leaking which can be easily
fixed or if it's an indication that the entire job was done
incorrectly and you're headed for more trouble. If no independent
inspection was done, it would probably be a good idea to get an
inspection done by a qualified inspector at this point.

ransley January 26th 08 02:46 PM

Home Roofing claim
 
On Jan 25, 10:33*pm, wrote:
Hi,

I had the roof of my house replaced by a construction company due to
hail damage. *The damage was covered by my home insurance policy less
the deductible.

6 months later I have a leak in the ceiling of one of my bedrooms. *We
have not settled the charges with the construction company yet, as my
mortgage company needs to get involved in endorsing the checks from my
insurance company and this has taken time.

Do I inform the mortgage company of the leaks in the ceiling? *Is
there any value in letting the mortgage company know of this issue?

Any insight would be appreciated.


I would notify anyone involved by phone, email and with a cetified
letter. You most likely did not get a permit but its not to late and
you will get the city inspector to go over the whole job and see if
everything was done right. if he gets paid before its fixed, if it was
actualy his fault, your problem gets bigger.

[email protected] January 27th 08 03:04 PM

Home Roofing claim
 
Thanks to all for your input.

The contractor is coming in next week to look at the leak. A permit
was got for the work done.

Lets see what happens next week

[email protected] January 27th 08 04:11 PM

Home Roofing claim
 
Notify insurance as well. If they are paying they have a lot more
muscle to withhold payment until job is correct than you do.

On Jan 27, 10:04*am, wrote:
Thanks to all for your input.

The contractor is coming in next week to look at the leak. *A permit
was got for the work done.

Lets see what happens next week



www.therooftech.com March 13th 08 12:46 PM

Home Roofing claim
 
On Jan 27, 12:11*pm, wrote:
Notify insurance as well. *If they are paying they have a lot more
muscle to withhold payment until job is correct than you do.

On Jan 27, 10:04*am, wrote:



Thanks to all for your input.


The contractor is coming in next week to look at the leak. *A permit
was got for the work done.


Lets see what happens next week- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -

Try www.therooftech.com


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