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Selling a house takes patience, paperwork, and apparently immunity to whatever a nosy neighbor decides to say to your buyer mid-inspection.
One homeowner had a signed contract in place until a gossiping neighbor wandered over during the buyer’s home inspection and started spinning outright tall tales, claiming a nearby house was a hub for dangerous activity and that an armed motorcyclist regularly parked out front.
None of it was true, but the buyer, an elderly woman planning to live alone, didn’t know that. She fled inside in tears, screaming to cancel the sale entirely, and rescinded her offer on the spot.
With only a small initial deposit collected and legal fees likely to eat up whatever’s left, the homeowner is left wondering if there’s any real path forward after a stranger’s lies unraveled the entire deal in minutes.
Keep reading for the full scoop.
Neighbor sabotaged my sale
My house was under contract up until two days ago. The buyer came for the inspection and was outside talking with her realtor when my nosy, gossiping neighbor came over to talk to them.
This neighbor was definitely up to no good.
Said neighbor then proceeds to tell lies about the other neighbors, such as the house on the other side of mine is a “drug house” and there is someone who drives a Harley and carries a firearm who always parks in front of my house.
The homeowner can hardly believe what they’re hearing.
None of these things are true.
The buyer, however, being an elderly woman who is moving into a home on her own, was absolutely terrified and ran into the house crying and screaming to cancel the sale.
She rescinds her offer.
Now they find themselves at a total loss.
We had only received her first deposit, which after legal fees, wouldn’t even be worth the hassle.
I know there probably isn’t anything I can do, but figured I’d put my story out there in case anyone has any ideas.
What is this neighbor’s problem anyway?
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Redditors chime in with their thoughts.
The real problem here is obviously the neighbor.
This commenter thinks this is enough to bring to a lawyer.
Why would the neighbor want to do something like this?
If it were up to this commenter, they’d say this.
What happened here goes beyond typical neighborhood gossip, it directly cost the homeowner money and collapsed a legally binding agreement over information that was entirely made up.
The buyer’s fear wasn’t irrational, it was a completely reasonable response to being told terrifying things about her future home by someone who seemed to have no reason to lie.
Whether pursuing legal action against the neighbor makes sense financially is a separate question from whether the behavior itself was wrong, and given the modest deposit and likely legal costs, the numbers may simply not favor a lawsuit here.
But one thing is for sure: this homeowner needs to do everything in their power to keep this neighbor far away from their property.
