Sanchez
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Aug 26, 2003
- Messages
- 1,355
The guy is a builder. He likely had plans when he toured the property as a buyer. Unless I miss my guess, this lot was available because of this issue, probably at a discount. He went forward with the intention of taking the excavation to the point of no return, hoping OP would give in, or ideally assume responsibility for most/all of the cost of his plan, really upping his return on investment for taking a chance on this piece of property.
There has been lots of well meaning, logical advice in this thread, however at the end of the day the reality is the only way OP is going to get her interests protected is by retaining a skilled professional gun for hire that is working solely in her interest. These types of things commonly go on for years with the aggressive party hoping to outwait their opponent. No doubt most of the financial responsibility on the builder's end is shifted onto his business, not something he shares personally. A well timed bankruptcy filing could leave OP holding ashes, while the builder in fact prevails in the end.
The municipality & its police force are going to do what benefits them in the end, not OP. The mortgage company is not going to send in house counsel to protect OP's interests, matter of fact she may face unintended consequences herself. Hiring a good attorney now is the best way to keep OP's costs down in the end.
I certainly agree that contacting her lender (if there is one) at this point is a bad idea.
I also wonder whether there is a benefit to the OP to have a retaining wall. I do not completely understand the situation, but based on the description it seems that erosion is possible and may affect OP's property moving forward. I say this just to point out that the situation needs to be viewed in total and that usually spite and bravado (as many are advocating on this thread) may serve to harm OP in the future.