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Wisconsin law requires sellers to provide the completed real estate condition report to the buyer no less than ten days after accepting an offer to purchase, but you can certainly provide it earlier. Some sellers provide the condition report to a prospective buyer before even receiving an offer to purchase.
If you live in a non-disclosure state, it means that sale prices in a real estate transaction are not disclosed or recorded as public record. If you want to know a sale price of a home, you'd have to ask the seller directly or work with a real estate professional who has access to the Multiple Listing Service (MLS).
In both Minnesota and Wisconsin, you generally do not have to disclose to a buyer that a person died in the home.
The only federally mandated disclosure requirement is lead paint. The individual states determine if asbestos, wetlands, or floodplain disclosures are required.
But, there are 12 states that are still considered non-disclosure: Alaska, Idaho, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri (some counties), Montana, New Mexico, North Dakota, Texas, Utah and Wyoming. In a non-disclosure state, transaction sale prices are not available to the public.
In general, if the defect existed before you bought the home and the seller failed to disclose the defect, and you incurred monetary damages as a result, you can sue the seller or another party for breach of contract. A successful lawsuit could result in payment for the cost of repairs.
Property disclosure statements essentially outline any flaws that the home sellers (and their real estate agents) are aware of that could negatively affect the home's value. These statements are required by law in most areas of the country so buyers can know a property's good and bad points before they close the deal.
If a seller fails to disclose, or actively conceals, problems that affect the value of the property; they are violating the law, and may be subject to a lawsuit for recovery of damages based on claims of fraud and deceit, misrepresentation and/or breach of contract.