Forum Discussion
JALLEN4
Oct 15, 2013Explorer
AO_hitech wrote:JALLEN4 wrote:
I can assure you in Florida he is well within his rights.
If the above poster is correct regarding 48 hours notice then the most they could enforce would be the same. Since the property owner does not own the RV I doubt that the inspection of the interior will be enforceable, even if the OP signs the contract. Simply because you signed a contract does NOT make everything in the contract enforceable, regardless of what most seem to think.
I would either, 1. Move on, 2. Cross out the clause and sign the contract, 3. Note in the contract that premises is defined as the exterior property and not the RV.
Having operated multiple businesses for several decades, I am simply amazed at the attitude people have about contracts. The business owner spends(in most cases)literally thousands of dollars to have them written by an attorney specializing in that discipline with experience as to what is and is not legal. It would not be a very informed owner who then negotiates the terms of that contract, past the price, on the fly!
In more than forty years and tens of thousands of transactions, I have had the contract seriously questioned twice. One was for the rental of an indoor RV storage space when the potential customer thought the contract was too complicated. The second was by a young attorney on the purchase of a new car. We agreed to disagree with the storage place customer and the young attorney had his money returned and asked to leave.
I have always tried to be honest with the consumer. It is my product, my contract, written by my attorney, and written to protect me...not the consumer. If the terms of that contract are so onerous as to be unacceptable to the consumer, time for the consumer to move on and find a better solution.
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