Many jurisdictions recognize several forms of stigmatized property, and have passed resolutions or statutes to deal with them. One issue that separates them is disclosure. Depending on the
jurisdiction of the house, the seller may not be required to disclose the full facts. Some specific types must always be disclosed, others are up to the jurisdiction, and still others up to the realtor. The types of stigma include: •
Criminal stigma: the property was used in the ongoing commission of a crime. For example, a house is stigmatized if it has been used as a
brothel,
chop shop, or
drug den. In the case of drug dens, some drug addicts may inadvertently come to the address expecting to purchase illegal drugs. Most jurisdictions require full disclosure of this sort of element. •
Murder/suicide stigma: Some jurisdictions in the United States require property sellers to reveal if murder or suicide occurred on the premises. California state law does if the event occurred within the previous three years. Florida state law does not require any notification and protects sellers from lawsuits. •
Public stigma: when the stigma is known to a wide selection of the population and any reasonable person can be expected to know of it. Examples include the
Amityville Horror house and the home of the
Menéndez brothers. Public stigma must always be disclosed, in almost all
American and
European jurisdictions. ==Legal status==