He said it took someone special to enjoy the Heating, Ventilation and A/C.

The guy insisted on the codicil until the Heating, Ventilation and A/C tech showed him what was wrong with the system.

My guy was a realtor and he was telling me about a home he had just acquired. The owners wanted an exorbitant price, and were not willing to do any replaces, but he told me it was going to take someone special to enjoy the Heating, Ventilation and A/C system. I asked him if it was old. He nodded and then told me the guy built it himself. It was ornate, but it was severely old. He wanted the Heating, Ventilation and A/C plan to look love it was built in the 1750s. The only problem with the Heating, Ventilation and A/C plan was that it was so old. The first thing any potential customer is going to do is ask them to install a current Heating, Ventilation and A/C plan before they buy. He already said he would not make any changes, and he wanted to put a codicil into the contract that the Heating, Ventilation and A/C plan couldn’t be detachd. I wanted to suppose if the guy could do it, but my guy said he could. The customers could negotiate it out, but he wasn’t sure the guy was going to budge. He said this was going to be the hardest home he had ever had to sell. Two months later, he had someone interested in the house. The guy was an Heating, Ventilation and A/C supplier and he liked what the guy had done, but not the Heating, Ventilation and A/C plan itself. The guy insisted on the codicil until the Heating, Ventilation and A/C tech showed him what was wrong with the system. He pointed out that there was no way to safely change the air filters, and what happened when the furnace died, which it could do any afternoon. The owner frowned, but only said he wasn’t paying for the current Heating, Ventilation and A/C system. The Heating, Ventilation and A/C supplier purchased the home and they all shook on the deal.

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