Harringay online

Harringay, Haringey - So Good they Spelt it Twice!

When browsing RightMove and Zoopla this weekend, I was shocked discover my own flat - which is not for sale - being advertised by Kings Estate Agents!  

Has anyone else had a similar experience?  If you've recently bought, you might want to check! 

It had been first advertised a couple of weeks ago and then they 'reduced the asking price' just last week.  At the time I bought the flat, last October, it was advertised by several estate agents, including Kings - so they have simply reused the photographs and description (but nearly doubled the asking price!).  When I contacted them to ask for a viewing they told me it had just been sold.  I can only assume that Kings (and perhaps other estate agents) are doing this systematically to increase traffic to their websites and shops.

This practice is completely dishonest and harmful both to those whose properties are being advertised (in my case, my flat now looks like it has been on the market for some time and had the price reduced, which will not be helpful when I do come to sell) and to those trying to buy, who are being given false information about both the availability and price of properties.

I believe this is illegal and am considering reporting them both to their ombudsman and the regulator.  I'm interested to hear if anyone knows about this practice or has had a similar experience - with Kings or anyone else.

Thanks,

Elin

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I seem to remember a similar thread on here a while ago, I can't remember which agency it was though. A few searches may bring something up.

I seem to remember a similar thread on here a while ago

That thread appears to have been removed from HOL (perhaps the site administrator may comment). When I did a general web search for the estate agent concerned, Google claimed about "21,500 results", but with an interesting disclaimer:

"Some results may have been removed under data protection law in Europe"

Was this a concerted effort at sanitising, in a similar way as some criminal convictions are deemed to be 'spent' ?

My preference would be those few estate agents who misbehave in this way to be named and shamed – and remain as a warning and example for others.


Councillor (Highgate Ward)

Liberal Democrat Party

Which thread? Have you searched exhaustively? It hasn't been removed by us to the best of my memory and knowledge. Very few threads get removed by us - though by reading the number of comments like yours Clive, people would be forgiven for thinking differently. I don't know if this thread has been removed and don't have time to search as a check. If it's been removed, I don't know why. Posters remove their threads for various reasons as I've explained to you in my reply to your HoLMail message.

I remembered it too and I think it's this one.

Thans for clearing that up, Sarah.

I knew there was an earlier thread but had not correctly remembered the name of the company involved. Sorry for the confusion.

SarahC has identified the correct thread (above).

Perhaps some sort of register should be set up to record such incidences ...

Good idea. I wonder if there's a councillor who lives locally who might be prepared to do that?

We consulted King's when we were thinking of renting out our flat a couple of years ago but made it very clear we were only weighing our options and only wanted their opinion. They were very pushy and we said we would contact them if we needed them, mainly to be polite. We agreed between ourselves that we would never use them.

A couple of days later, they called to say they had shown details of our flat to a few people who wanted to come and look at it. This was all done without our permission. Furious, I told them to delete all our details and to never contact me again.

Superglue in a lock can really ruin a busy Saturday, best not do that.

It's worse if you they put nails in the keyhole first.

It's a real drag when someone lets all the tyres down on a car, especially if you're in a hurry to get to the next real estate meeting. And it is not a criminal offence.

Elin, as well as reporting them as you were considering, can I suggest a chat with Trading Standards.  And perhaps also with campaigning organisations in the housing field. Plainly, there's a need for some hard, accurate information.

Because this may be a genuine, one-off mistake.  Or that well known phenomenon "the rogue trader". The person who - entirely unrepresentative of their profession - acts recklessly, damaging both clients and the firm which employs them.

But if any estate agents are regularly making such misrepresentations the practice needs exposing. 

Personally I can't see very much ethical difference between what you've described and various dubious practices for misselling; or pushing up prices by creating a market "buzz".  Not least because - as the Economist told us a couple of weeks ago: "Estate Agents are resurgent" and Forever Blowing Bubbles.

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