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A real-estate agent accidentally burned down a $2 million home ahead of an open house

Mar 27, 2024, 18:58 IST
Business Insider
A stock photo shows a "Fire Line Do Not Cross" sign in front of a destroyed property.carrollphoto/Getty Images
  • A real-estate agent burned down a property while preparing for an open house, a court ruled.
  • Her employer was ordered to pay $550,000 in damages to the homeowner and renters.
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An Australian real-estate agent accidentally set a multimillion-dollar property on fire while preparing for an open house, according to a recent court judgment.

According to the judgment, the fire at the property in an affluent Sydney suburb started on the afternoon of May 25, 2019.

The court document says that the only person in the property at the time of the fire was Julie Bundock, who was the acting real-estate agent for its sale.

In the ruling, handed down Tuesday by Justice David Hammerschlag of the Supreme Court of New South Wales, Domain Residential Northern Beaches, Bundock's employer, was ordered to pay more than 850,000 Australian dollars in damages.

This translates to over $550,000 in US money, which will go primarily toward compensating the homeowner, Peter Alan Bush, for the loss of his house.

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A smaller portion is designated for the four renters who had their belongings destroyed in the fire, the judgment said.

The property was valued at an estimated $3 million in Australian currency, News.com.au reported.

According to the judgment, about 20 minutes before the outbreak of the fire, Bundock had placed laundry, consisting of bedsheets and a quilt cover, onto a steel shelf near a light fixture she had switched on.

Bundock was there to supervise an open house, it said, one of several taking place ahead of a scheduled auction.

The court found it was likely that the heat generated by the light fitting caused the bedsheets to ignite, which initiated the fire.

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The homeowner claimed to the court that Bundock had told him soon after the fire started: "Oh my God, Pete, I think I have burnt down your house."

He said that she confessed to placing some sheets on top of a freestanding metal shelf while tidying up, "right up against the light on the wall," the judgment said.

Bush said Bundock told him: "I think that's what started the fire."

In the judgment, Hammerschlag described Bundock as an "aggressive and uncooperative witness," while determining that "on the balance of probabilities," she caused the fire.

"That a fire might be caused by putting or throwing bedding up against a burning light is obvious," he said. "That risk was plainly foreseeable, and Bundock ought to have known this."Neither Bundock nor Domain Residential responded to requests for comment, which were sent outside operating hours.
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