If These Walls Could Talk…

By: Amanda Hoffman, PR Specialist | May 3, 2006

I don’t believe in ghosts… at least I don’t think I do.  Yet I have to admit, when signing the closing papers on my recently purchased 1907 craftsman, I couldn’t help but wonder if anyone had ever died in this old house.  Could it even be haunted?  The idea of sharing the next several years with a supernatural houseguest made me a little uneasy.  I quickly decided that my superstitions were irrational, and ended up purchasing a great house, which, at least to my knowledge, isn’t inhabited by any postmortem roommates.

The New York Times ran an interesting article on Sunday about people with similar concerns.  While it seems perfectly acceptable to ask just about any question about a home’s history, most buyers are hesitant to ask if anyone ever died in the home, and sellers are usually even more reluctant to volunteer the information.  Could the knowledge of a death in the home, particularly an unnatural or violent one, bring the price down?  Maybe.  According to the Times, the house in Beverly Hills where the Menendez brothers killed their parents lost more than $1 million in value when it was sold.

This sort of thing doesn’t seem to bother some people.  I’ve even heard of people scouring the obituaries as a way of learning of homes coming on the market.  But for many people, a death in the home, especially a homicide or suicide, can be a deal-breaker… which begs the question: would you purchase a home if you knew someone had died there?

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Comments

3 Comments so far

  1. Zillow Fan on May 5, 2006 8:21 am

    Great point, Before I buy homes of value, I always do a quick background check (criminal, sex offender and so forth) on the homeowners and related neighbors. Couple of bucks, provides solid piece of mind when spending a large sum of money.

  2. Brian on May 8, 2006 8:57 am

    Any deaths are ok, soon the memory of it will fade, even a murder. But when a murder or death is high profile case such as The Scott Peterson House in Modesto, that house has been stigmafied forever and remain stigmafied for a long time………..

  3. Rosalyn on May 25, 2006 2:57 pm

    Houses having some sort of “stigma” isn’t that uncommon, as I can easily come up personal examples. And what is considered a stigma can vary with the individual. My sister’s family bought a house that was the site of a notorious murder. The “stigma” helped them get it at a really low price, and it didn’t bother them. When they sold it a number of years later, very few people remembered the murder, the stigma was gone, and they got a good price.

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