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Asked in CA May 26, 2022 ,  0 answers

Buying a home

In the state of California is it legal to sell a house with no stove?

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3 Answers

Anonymous
Reply

Posted on / Aug. 19, 2007 01:01:00

Re: Buying a home

I would say it is legal to sell a house without a stove.

There is a seller's disclosure form required by Civil Code section 1102.6 in most (but not all) residential property sales. It is called REAL ESTATE TRANSFER DISCLOSURE STATEMENT. It has a checklist of items that the property may, or may not, have. The very first of these is "range." There are many other things on the checklist. Its purpose is to point out both obvious and not-so-obvious facts about the house, known to the seller but possibly overlooked by the buyer. I'd say the seller's obligations with respect to stoves are discharged by checking the box, or not checking it.

Maybe you are wondering if a seller may remove the stove when vacating the house. If the seller checked the "range" box, the range stays. It also stays if it is built in. I think if the box is NOT checked and the stove or range is "loose" and not a built-in, the seller could take it with him.

Anonymous
Reply

Posted on / Aug. 19, 2007 01:01:00

Re: Buying a home

I would say it is legal to sell a house without a stove.

There is a seller's disclosure form required by Civil Code section 1102.6 in most (but not all) residential property sales. It is called REAL ESTATE TRANSFER DISCLOSURE STATEMENT. It has a checklist of items that the property may, or may not, have. The very first of these is "range." There are many other things on the checklist. Its purpose is to point out both obvious and not-so-obvious facts about the house, known to the seller but possibly overlooked by the buyer. I'd say the seller's obligations with respect to stoves are discharged by checking the box, or not checking it.

Maybe you are wondering if a seller may remove the stove when vacating the house. If the seller checked the "range" box, the range stays. It also stays if it is built in. I think if the box is NOT checked and the stove or range is "loose" and not a built-in, the seller could take it with him.

Anonymous
Reply

Posted on / Aug. 19, 2007 01:01:00

Re: Buying a home

I would say it is legal to sell a house without a stove.

There is a seller's disclosure form required by Civil Code section 1102.6 in most (but not all) residential property sales. It is called REAL ESTATE TRANSFER DISCLOSURE STATEMENT. It has a checklist of items that the property may, or may not, have. The very first of these is "range." There are many other things on the checklist. Its purpose is to point out both obvious and not-so-obvious facts about the house, known to the seller but possibly overlooked by the buyer. I'd say the seller's obligations with respect to stoves are discharged by checking the box, or not checking it.

Maybe you are wondering if a seller may remove the stove when vacating the house. If the seller checked the "range" box, the range stays. It also stays if it is built in. I think if the box is NOT checked and the stove or range is "loose" and not a built-in, the seller could take it with him.

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