Lexology – Short sales: let the agent beware

If a transaction is a short sale, the real estate agent handling the sale might be liable to the buyer if that fact is not disclosed up front. This week a California Court of Appeal issued a decision which imposes a duty upon a seller’s agent to disclose that the seller’s existing loans far exceed the contract purchase price. Holmes v. Summer, __ Cal.App.4th. ___ (2010 Daily Journal D.A.R. 15614) (filed October 6, 2010).    

In this case the seller’s agent listed for sale a residential property for $749,000. The property was subject to three deeds of trust totaling debts of $1,140,000, thus the sale would have to be a “short sale.” No disclosure of the existing loan amounts were made in the MLS listing or to the buyer prior to executing the purchase contract.

The purchase contract provided that the buyer would purchase the property free and clear of any liens. After entering into the contract the buyer sold the buyer’s existing home in order to purchase the property. The seller was not able to get the three lenders to agree to a 35% reduction in the existing loans, and then defaulted on the obligation to sell the property free and clear of liens. Instead of suing the seller for a breach of the contract and failure to disclose the problem with the loans up front, the buyer sued the seller’s agent. The trial court surmised that the seller was broke and thus the buyer went after the agent’s “deep pockets.”

The trial court dismissed the buyer’s case, holding that the agent had no duty to disclose the loan information. The Court of Appeal reversed that decision. It held that in this instance the listing agent had a duty to disclose to the buyer the existence of deeds of trust of record and the extent to which the property was “underwater.” Furthermore, the disclosure had to be made before the buyer signed the purchase contract. The Court of Appeal indicated that where there was such a substantial over encumbrance of the property “there is a duty on that agent or broker to disclose the state of affairs to the buyer, so the buyer can make an informed choice whether or not to enter into the transaction that has a considerable risk of failure.”

This conflicts with another duty of real estate agents, i.e., the duty not to disclose clients’ confidential information. The court stated that both the “duty to disclose and the duty to maintain client confidentiality is clearly involved [in this case].” The court opined that deeds of trust, being in the public record, are not “confidential information” and that the basic duty of an agent to treat each party to the transaction “honestly and fairly” trumps the agent’s duty of confidentiality to the seller. To avoid the conflict, the court suggested the agent must obtain the seller’s permission to disclose such confidential information to a buyer before the buyer enters into a contract to purchase the property. Otherwise, the agent would be proceeding at his or her own “peril of liability in the event the transaction goes awry due to the undisclosed risks involved.”

This case involved facts about existing loans that made a short sale extremely unlikely to succeed. What if the loans were smaller? What if there were fewer lenders? What if the seller has a pending divorce or bankruptcy? Is a listing agent required to disclose such confidential information to the buyer? This decision might open the floodgates to other claims against listing agents for failure to disclose confidential information about a seller’s financial situation or other relevant circumstances that might make it difficult for the seller to consummate the sale. It is going to be important for agents to carefully assess the risks and rewards when selling distressed properties, and to beware of this disclosure obligation

Posted via email from Title Insurance
Continuing Ed for Title Agents

US insurer Fidelity National to offshore more work to India – The Economic Times

CHENNAI: Spotting an opportunity to cut its costs by around 30 per cent with increased productivity, US-based insurer Fidelity National Title Group Inc has decided to scale up its business process outsourcing (BPO) and software development activities in India.

The company had set up its captive BPO company Fidelity National Financial India in Bangalore three years back.

The $4.6 million revenue Fidelity National Financial India has around 800 employees searching and confirming property titles in the US for its insurance parent.

“We will be increasing the headcount by 1,000 to 1,800 starting next year for our BPO operations so that we can shift work like accounts payable, legal operations here. We are also planning to expand the software development team here,” Senior Vice President Andy Giddings told IANS.

According to him, the insurer has decided to develop software for its core title insurance business back home out of India in May and formed a small team of 25 people.

“We will be expanding that team by adding 100 more software engineers during the first quarter of the next year. We have around 15 different software applications and we expect the number to go down with the development of integrated programmes,” Giddings said.

About BPO activity in India, he said the company has now graduated from doing indexing and data entry to detailed property title searches and other value added transactions like title policy underwriting and engineering, database management, mortgage and tax services.

“We have also changed the systems and procedures which in turned improved the productivity as well as the job content for the employees. The utilisation rate is around 90 percent whereas the average for other captive BPOs is around 50 percent,” added Country Head of Indian Operations Sameer Dhanrajani.

Posted via email from Title Insurance
Continuing Ed for Title Agents

Harvey’s Lake settlement company owner pleads guilty to wire fraud | PoconoRecord.com

The owner of a Harvey’s Lake settlement company pleaded guilty in federal court Tuesday to stealing nearly $2 million from 92 victims over a three-year period.

Elizabeth Sichler, 58, owner of Priority Search Inc., failed to pay various obligations associated with real estate transactions that her company handled as a title agent between 2005 and 2008.

According to court documents, Sichler failed to pay sellers’ first and second mortgages, sellers’ cash proceeds, utility bills, property taxes, real estate transfer taxes, filing fees and title insurance premiums.

Instead, she used the funds dedicated for those purposes for personal gain and to cover operating expenses for her business, including employee salaries and benefits.

Sichler, who was charged in June, entered her guilty plea on wire fraud charges Tuesday before United States District Court Magistrate Judge Malachy E. Mannion.

She faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison, a $250,000 fine and a maximum of three years supervised release.

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Continuing Ed for Title Agents

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