Believe it or not, there are laws in place for the selling of a Haunted House, and whether or not ghosts are relevant varies by state. Some states require disclosure of apparitions and/or visions, sounds, movement or any other evidence of ghosts. Others do not. In some areas, disclosure is entirely dependent on the notoriety of the haunting. For instance, if you have made public statements to neighbors or news media, that you are aware of or have been the recipient of a supernatural visit, then you must disclose it as a material fact. Arizona law runs along the same lines as many other states in that home sellers must disclose any material facts pertaining to the home, but do not need to disclose that it was the site of a natural death, suicide or homicide or any other crime classified as a felony. This leaves a wide open space for ghosts to enter the picture… is the presence of preternatural activity a material fact? If you have trumpeted the existence of a ghost in your home all over town, does it now become reality? What evidence can be produced? You tell me! What do you think?
Are There Laws for Selling a Haunted House?
By Zoe Eisenberg
As a real estate professional, you may have come into contact with a spooky space. Self-slamming doors, footsteps on the stairs, the laughter of small children—we’ve heard all about haunted houses here on Housecall. But are there any disclosure laws for selling a haunted house?
With Halloween haunting us right around the corner, Western Michigan University-Cooley Law School professors are sharing their thoughts regarding disclosing paranormal activity during a real estate transaction.
“In most areas of the country, a home seller would not need to disclose whether their home is haunted, but laws differ by state or even local ordinances,” says WMU-Cooley Professor Chris Trudeau.
“In Florida there is a stigma statute that absolves responsibility of disclosing past murders,” says Professor Renalia DuBose, who teaches at WMU-Cooley’s Tampa Bay campus. No need to disclose past murder? Potential buyers may not appreciate this, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t legal.
New York’s Stambovsky v. Ackley is often cited when discussing disclosure of haunted happenings. In this case, the state’s Supreme Court said that a house, which the owner had previously advertised to the public as having paranormal activity, was legally haunted for the purpose of an action brought by a purchaser of the home.
“Under Stambovsky, when a homeowner tells others their home is haunted, they would have to disclose this information,” says Trudeau. “If a home has a reputation, or is known as haunted, it will need to be disclosed. The house in the Stambovsky case had media coverage about it being haunted.”
Trudeau notes that laws do differ by state, but the disclosure of psychologically affected properties depends on what others know and do not know. “Such disclosures would be positive under good faith,” he says.
So, in most states, the more famously your home is haunted, the more you need to disclose. “If it is just some inkling, one would not have to disclose, so it would vary on the amount of certainty of the owner,” says DuBose. “The more likely an individual thinks a home is haunted, the more likely a disclosure is expected.”
The verdict: Unless your property has had high media coverage for spooky spectacles, feel free to keep those skeletons in the closet.