Matt Soniak
4 BR, 2 BA, 1 Ghost: What the Law Says About Selling Haunted Houses
by Matt Soniak - October 31, 2011 - 3:06 PM

My girlfriend and I have been watching FX’s new horror-drama American Horror Story for the last few weeks (we agree that it’s OK, and any shortcomings are made up for by the presence of Mrs. Coach Taylor and Ruth Fisher).

In just a few episodes, it’s been made very clear to the audience that numerous people have been killed and maimed in the haunted house that the show’s main characters live in. It’s been mentioned that the characters’ real estate agent was obligated by law to disclose that people had been murdered in the house. I’ve seen this brought up in other haunted house stories before, but it’s not a consistent trope.

It is true, though? Do horror writers ask us to suspend our disbelief about too-broadly drawn characters and the paranormal, but not real estate law? If you’re buying a haunted house, does anyone really have to tell you?

Ghoul Disclosure
The answer is no. And yes. And sort of. It all depends on the where the house is and the way the laws are worded there.

Most U.S. states require sellers to fill out a standard form disclosing what they know about the property’s condition and list any potential physical defects. This is a relatively recent reverse of the older “buyer beware” norm in real estate and lets buyers know ahead of time of any major problems with their dream home.

There are other defects besides faulty wiring and sinking foundations, though. Some states go a step further and require sellers to also disclose “emotional defects” that could impact and stigmatize a property. This includes traumatic events like murders and suicides, reported paranormal activity and even proximity to homeless shelters.

Whether you have to disclose anything and what types of defects you have to disclose all depends on the jurisdiction. If a seller does have to disclose emotional defects, which ones and how much detail they need to go into again varies among locations.

In Massachusetts, for example, the possibility of a property being “psychologically impacted” isn’t considered a “material fact required to be disclosed” to potential buyers. In Virginia, emotional defects like murders and ghost sightings only have to be disclosed if they physically affect the property (Blood running from the walls? Gotta tell the buyer). In California, as American Horror Story demonstrates, sellers do have to disclose emotional defects, but only in a very limited way. The state Civil Code requires that a death on the property only needs to be disclosed if it occurred less than three years prior to the sale and older incidents need to be addressed only if the buyer specifically asks. Some jurisdictions are a little more vague in the way they word things, so smart sellers could potentially disclose what they need to without having to drop words like “haunted,” “poltergeist” or “murder spree.”

The Haunted Mansion
There’s an infamous court case often cited when it comes to disclosure law, Stambovsky v. Ackley, that revolves around a haunted house.

Helen Ackley owned a big old Victorian home in Nyack, New York. The town sits about 30 miles north of New York City on the west bank of the Hudson River, in an area known for many haunted places, including the legendary Sleepy Hollow. Mrs. Ackley was well aware that her house was supposedly haunted. In fact, she claims to have seen several ghosts herself, including one that gave her approval for a new paint color in the living room and several dressed in colonial-era clothing. She described her home’s ghosts for the local newspaper and Reader’s Digest and even got the house featured on a “haunted house” walking tour of Nyack. When she decided to put the house up for sale and retire to Florida, though, Mrs. Ackley suddenly got very shy about the ghosts.

Jeffrey and Patrice Stambovsky wanted to buy the house and agreed to Ackley’s asking price of $650,000. It wasn’t until after the couple gave Ackley a $32,500 down payment that they were talking to a local about their purchase and were asked, “Oh, you’re buying the haunted house?”

The Stambovskys were not exactly thrilled to learn about the alleged haunting of their new home and attempted to back out of the sale. Ackley would neither admit any wrongdoing nor cancel the sale and return the deposit, so the Stambovskys took her to court.

They lost the case, with the court citing their caveat emptor (“let the buyer beware”) responsibility to uncover the property’s defects before committing to a sale. They appealed and the Appellate Division of State Supreme Court ruled in their favor in a 3-2 decision.

The court found that, regardless of whether or not ghosts are real and the house was truly haunted, the fact that the house had been widely reported as haunted affected its value. Ackley “had deliberately fostered the belief that her home was possessed by ghosts” in the past and was therefore at fault for not disclosing this attribute of the house to the buyers, who, not being locals, could not readily learn about the defect on their own. On that note, one of the justices joked, “Who you gonna call?… Applying the strict rule of caveat emptor to a contract involving a house possessed by poltergeists conjures up visions of a psychic or medium routinely accompanying the structural engineers and Terminix man on an inspection of every home subject to a contract of sale.”

The Stambovskys eventually got their money back and Ackley eventually sold the house despite, or maybe because of, the fact that she had to disclose her supposed ghosts.

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Comments (19)
  1. I <3 American Horror Story :)

  2. I <3 anything about haunted houses! ;)

  3. Ah, Stambovsky v. Ackley, the standard first year Property Law case on estoppel. Great case, and, as Matt pointed out, a scream to read (sorry, couldn’t resist). It’s also the first and maybe only time that a court has officially ruled that a house was constructively haunted. At least for the purposes of that transaction–once you claim it’s haunted, you can’t go back.

  4. I live in Kansas and the contract my wife and I signed when we bought our house had a disclosure about history of murder/suicide and paranormal activity at the house. Of course nothing abnormal was disclosed about the house, but that kind of freaked me out since we were buying a house that was pretty old.

    We’ve been there around 6 years with no problems. In fact, this house is way more comfortable than the last one we lived at which was a lot newer. For some reason it had an eerie feeling to it from time to time. I never experienced anything there, but my wife was home alone one night and the dog went crazy about something in the house that she couldn’t find a reason for. Of course that’s not an indication of anything but was pretty weird.

  5. Anyone else tired of all the ‘Ghosts and Goblins’ stories that rise up every October?

    As an import from Canada I find Americans’ love of ghosts (from witches to holy trinity) just a bit creepy. Rather than join the enlightened world the U.S. is becoming even more backward and superstitious.

    Any wonder why you are a quickly fading empire?

  6. Wow Paul. Your last name is really apropos.

  7. By the way, is that the French way of spelling Atheist?

  8. Nope, the French spell it “athée.”

  9. I’m in New Zealand and we had all the kids out last night trying to get free lollies. I was kinda disgusted at it, it’s totally an american thing that the big box stores are perpetuating so they can get kids to pressure their parents to buy more plastic made in china crap. Some stupid lady brought her kids to my door to beg for sweets and I went off at her, what a stupid thing to encourage your kids to do in this day and age. Halloween = paedophiles christmas!

  10. Pretty sure Paul was just trying to get everybody riled up…Paul tuck your tail between your legs and take your self back to Canadia. And Marc the “American thing” actually came from celtic traditions in Ireland. Now with that said the only kiwi I want to here from is Zoe Miller.

  11. Paul, I’m born and raised in New York and I agree with you. There’s a correlation between GDP and the number of creationists in countries.

  12. Hey Dani…there is a correlation between any 2 things you can imagine. Correlation and causation are vastly different. Care to point to some peer reviewed reasearch backing your claim?

  13. WHOA. All of you need to get off the high and mighty horse and take a dose of humility. Enjoy the article for what it is and stop grouping together people to make yourselves feel superior.

  14. The Virginia law is totally true. When I bought my first house in VA, we asked if anyone had been murdered in it, and she said “Even if there had been one, I couldn’t tell you.” Glad I live in NC now!

  15. In the state of Minnesota, the Realtor is required to disclose if there has been a murder in (not on) the property, but that is as far as the coverage goes. Suicides and natural deaths are not reported, nor are alleged paranormal activity.

  16. Most of Florida hasn’t really been developed long enough to have any really juicy hauntings, not to say there aren’t some. Good thing, too, because haunting (or murder or crime scene) disclosures to prospective buyers aren’t required. Depending on the sellers you speak with, leaky roofs and termites shouldn’t be required either.

  17. @ Paul and Dani…

    Notice that the economic state of the United States of America has been in decline since the amount of “creationists” have decreased.

  18. There was a recent show on DIYnet about this: http://www.diynetwork.com/haunted-house-for-sale/show/index.html

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