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 of Eau Claire.
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"?