Scott
Burleson,#2UPDATE EX-employee responds
Sun, February 17, 2002
Theoretically you could place a lien on a home he owns locally! He owns the former model home in Lonesome Dove Estates in Arlington, Texas. He does not live in the home and currently has it up for sale. If a person filed a lien he would have to resolve it before it could close. The house is a 2377 plan and has been available for almost a year. Good luck.
#30
Sat, October 27, 2001
This email is a rebuttal to RipOff #7218. It was sent by B and C at [email protected]. Richard Fuller Homes Rip-off. Watch out! Liens are on your house that you don't even know about! Buyer Beware! *Consumer Suggestions (#7218) They filed the following rebuttal to the above Rip-Off Report: Their email: [email protected] Their name: B and C Their relationship to the company: Consumer Suggestion Rebuttal: Theoretically, a person COULD put a lien on Fuller's property if they sued him, won, and could not collect payment any other way. (Laws regarding this vary by state.) But despite some builders' claims that homeowners are law suit happy money grubbers, most homeowners do not want or pursue such oppressive legal procedures, and are merely trying to get what they paid for. ::::::::::::::::::
#40
Fri, October 26, 2001
They filed the following to the above Rip-Off Report:
Their email: [email protected]
Their name: Aurora
Their relationship to the company: Consumer Suggestion
Rebuttal:
TOO bad you can't put a lien on Fullers personal house hehehe then he would know how it felt.
#50
Tue, October 23, 2001
This email is a rebuttal to RipOff #7218.
It was sent by Angery Richard Fuller Home Owner at [email protected].
Richard Fuller Homes Rip-off. Watch out! Liens are on your house that you don't even know about! Buyer Beware! *Consumer Suggestion (#7218)
They filed the following rebuttal to the above Rip-Off Report:
Their email: [email protected]
Their name: Angery Richard Fuller Home Owner
Their phone number: 817-416-4954-fullers office
Their relationship to the company: Consumer Suggestion
Rebuttal:
You are not the only one that has had a lien placed on their home because of Richard Fuller Homes not paying their subcontrators.
We went to finance our home, in the parkway at park glenn subdivison, and found out their was a lien placed on our home from a CO-Serv Security Company. After talking to this company, I found our their are several homes involved that they have placed a lien.
What happens is, when they are not paid they file a lien on that property address and the lien goes to whomever owns it at the time. Even if the work was done before the home buyer closed on the house. The title company would not know because the company had not filed when it was still Richard Fullers property. We
ended just paying the $500 owed to Co-serv and they released the lien from our property.
It has been a year since the lien was put on our house and
I have checked with Co-serv and Richard Fuller has still not paid them so several home owners do not know a lien still exsists on their residence.
Even though we are out $500.more dollars, it was worth it not having to deal with these insufficient Richard Fuller Home employees.
We have been in our house almost a year and still have several issues not addressed and I do not think they ever will.
I cannot understand how a builder gets by with isrepresentation, poor quality work, horrible warranty, and a president that is located in Grapevine, TX that lies to home owners and most of the
time won't even return phone calls.
Contact your title company and let them know this has happened. Ours that we used, will not do any more closings for Richard Fuller Homes.
#60
Sun, October 21, 2001
They filed the following to the above Rip-Off Report:
Their email: [email protected]
Their name: CS
Their relationship to the company: Consumer Suggestion
Rebuttal:
Yours is about the fourth or fifth complaint on here about Fuller Homes now...ours is one of them. These liens I'm reading about, not just on this site, but elsewhere, are scarey. We went to our county's website and also the county courthouse to check records and see if our house had a lien the first time we heard it happened to someone else. Homebuyers need to be
sure they see proof that all subs have been paid before they close. You would think the title company would do this, but as usual, the consumer has to do their job, too. Title insurance for the home buyer is another option but you have to pay extra for it.
We have not found a lien on ours, but we've had numerous warranty issues that we're still fighting to get fixed. We found a great deal of help from Homeowners Against Deficient Dwellings, www.hadd.com , and ripoff report has been helpful too. HUD has also stepped in and assisted in getting the
warranty honored not only by Fuller but the warranty company.
We hope our situation will be resolved soon, but even if things go "smoothly" from now on, we're still looking at several months of living in a construction zone while extensive repairs are made, plus coordinating all the workers schedules, restoring things after repairs, and god forbid...dealing with anything else we find when they tear into it. How I wish I'd found somthing like this site before we bought so we could've
avoided this whole Fuller-induced nightmare!!!
#70
Fri, October 19, 2001
#80
Fri, October 19, 2001
#90
Fri, October 19, 2001
#100
Fri, October 19, 2001