Whitehall man puts house up for sale, adds buyer to life insurance

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<a href="http://www.lacrossetribune.com/articles/2008/04/04/news/z04house04.txt">Whitehall man puts house up for sale, adds buyer to life insurance</a>


By Pam Louwagie







.

Star Tribune





MINNEAPOLIS (MCT) — Whoever buys Bob Fanning’s house will hope he dies. And Fanning is fine with that.


Trying to separate his





5,600 square-foot western Wisconsin home from others in the real estate glut, Fanning, 69, has come up with an





odd incentive: The buyer





will be named beneficiary to a 10-year, $500,000 term life insurance policy. If Fanning dies in that time, the purchase price of the Whitehall, Wis., home — listed at $498,900 — is covered.





“He’s an outside-the-box thinker, no question about it,” said his Realtor, Wayne Peters.





Most younger sellers couldn’t plausibly use such a sales tactic, Peters said, but when someone is 69 “the odds are getting to the point where people realize that there’s a significant chance that they could collect.”





Fanning, who said he has taken his share of risks as a businessman, said he thinks it’s a great deal.





It would be voided if there are any shenanigans, though.





“The policy says he can’t commit suicide, nor can they knock him off,” Peters said. “The attorneys have provided for that.”





But isn’t Fanning afraid of any, er, “unfortunate accidents“?





“I had maybe a 10-second thought about that when we signed the policy,” Fanning said. “I’m pretty low profile to begin with.”





His wife, Janus, said she is supportive of his entrepreneurial thinking. “I’m always in awe of how he comes up with a different way of doing things,” she said. “It’s a perk for the house.”





As for the odds: Fanning said he has no health problems, though he joked that he’s “too short” for his weight. Both his parents died before age 79, as did a sister.





He said he’d be willing to disclose medical records to a buyer.





Without being specific, Fanning said he paid a hefty price for the insurance policy “because actuary tables show I might not reach 79, so I think it’s a hell of an incentive to buy a home.”





In Fanning’s mind, it’s not taboo to put a price on his head, as well as on his house.





“When you get to this





age,” he said, “death is something you have to start to deal with.”
 
Trooper,





You have to figure this isn't the first wacky idea this guy has come up with in the time they have been dating/married.
 
<p>Yep, I heard about this, in fact, I was reading an update on the City's Local News Website, the Property has indeed been sold, the new Owners said that they loved their new House, after talking to Mr Fanning about His love of Motorbikes in His Younger Days, they went out and bought Him a used Kawasaki 1100 Ninja racing Motorcycle so he could re-live His youth in His latter years as a token of their appreciation.</p>

<p>How thoughtful some People are.</p>
 
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