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Leaning brick privacy wall

Posted on 3/24/23 at 12:55 pm
Posted by SuperOcean
Member since Jun 2022
3293 posts
Posted on 3/24/23 at 12:55 pm
I am closing on a house and the inspection didn't notice that part of the brick privacy fence is being supported by a 2x10 against the fence and a 2x4 against a oak and pressing against the 2x10/fence. It's an old fence that is most likely tilted due to root growth.

The lean is enough that I could see it coming down in a good storm

What would be the best way to support it?

I was thinking .. Straight it back up. Sink a rod in concrete against the straighted wall. The wall is about 4 ft high and the leaning section is about 15

Would that rod be enough if I did 5 of them

Or is there a better way?
Posted by BilbeauTBaggins
probably stuck in traffic
Member since May 2021
4575 posts
Posted on 3/24/23 at 1:23 pm to
Contact the inspector immediately and email pictures. See what they say, then proceed.

I bought the house I have from a friend, and he was able to get in touch when the report came out because there was an error in the paperwork that we figured out and he was able to give a corrected report after (this was regarding the home value amongst the adjacent homes). Not sure if this situation of yours can be done how I suggested, but it's worth a shot.
Posted by keakar
Member since Jan 2017
30118 posts
Posted on 3/24/23 at 2:05 pm to
quote:

I am closing on a house and the inspection didn't notice that part of the brick privacy fence is being supported by a 2x10 against the fence and a 2x4 against a oak and pressing against the 2x10/fence. It's an old fence that is most likely tilted due to root growth.


sounds like the inspectort never got out of his car to even look at anything if something that obvious was missed.

was it your inspector or one hired by the realtor or sellers? that matters a lot since they routinely make false reports claiming whatever the person paying them wants the report to say. i worked behind many of them, helped homeowners take them to court for lies and flat out false reports, and i can tell you, a crack whore is more trustworthy then a house inspector
Posted by gumbo2176
Member since May 2018
15242 posts
Posted on 3/24/23 at 6:01 pm to
At the very least try to negotiate a better deal on the house since what you have described is going to be $$$$$ to fix. Either a discount in the total price or have the owner fix the issue or the sale is off.
Posted by Zappas Stache
Utility Muffin Research Kitchen
Member since Apr 2009
38777 posts
Posted on 3/24/23 at 6:17 pm to
Is there a footing under the fence? Is that moving too?
Posted by LSUengr
Baton Rouge
Member since Sep 2005
2337 posts
Posted on 3/25/23 at 8:07 am to
If this is in LA, home inspectors are not required to inspect fences/walls that are not a part of the structure. A good home inspector would have mentioned it in a report, but not required to do so.

If it has a footing, need to excavate along the sinking side to see why. Not going to be a cheap fix.
Posted by dragginass
Member since Jan 2013
2769 posts
Posted on 3/25/23 at 2:19 pm to
Home inspections don't include outside fences/structures.
Posted by texn
Pronouns: Y'All/Y'All's
Member since Nov 2019
3515 posts
Posted on 3/25/23 at 4:39 pm to
Didn't you notice it when you (not the inspector) inspected the house?

Had a similar issue with a rock wall. Best is to tear it down and rebuild it. It wasn't that expensive...some mortar and a couple of hermanos for the day.
Posted by East Coast Band
Member since Nov 2010
62870 posts
Posted on 3/26/23 at 7:09 am to
Can you provide a picture for better repair advice?
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