512.459.6010
No Written Agreement: No Intermediary Status
Every few years I feel compelled to write about buyer agency and
intermediary status because I continue to get calls from irrate buyers and
sellers (primarily buyers) who feel they have been abused by a broker or
agent attempting to serve as an intermediary in a transaction.
I do not like writing about this topic for the same reason I do not like
speaking on the topic: I get a lot of angry letters, e-mails and telephone
calls from brokers and agents who do not like the message I am delivering.
To those of you who get angry, I remind you that I don’t make the rules; I
just interpret them.
Let me get the bad news on the table quickly. If you do not have written
authorization from both buyer and seller, you cannot qualify for the
protection of intermediary status. Your listing agreement contains a
provision which allowing you to serve as an intermediary, if the seller
consents. To my knowledge, the only promulgated forms which contain
permission from the buyer for you to serve as an intermediary are buyer
representation forms. Consequently, if you do not get a buyer representation
agreement signed, you do not have written permission from the buyer to serve
as an intermediary.
If you do not have the proper documentation to allow the broker to serve as
an intermediary, a broker cannot allow the company’s agents to show the
company’s listings to prospective buyers without the risk of becoming a dual
agent and subjecting agent and broker to liability for breach of fiduciary
duties. Let me say that again a little louder “WITHOUT WRITTEN AUTHORIZATION
FROM BOTH BUYER AND SELLER TO SERVE AS AN INTERMEDIARY, YOU CANNOT SHOW YOUR
COMPANY’S LISTINGS WITHOUT SUBJECTING YOURSELF TO LIABILITY FOR BREACH OF
FIDUCIARY DUTIES.”
I know from talking to many of you and speaking at seminars etc, that well
over half of you are violating the intermediary rules established to provide
protection for you when you are working with both the buyer and seller. Many
of you are providing the required disclosure statement to the parties with
the belief that by giving the disclosure, you are able to serve as an
intermediary. That does not resolve the issue.
You must obtain written consent from both buyer and seller to serve as an
intermediary. The reason I hear most often for not getting a buyer
representation agreement signed is that they are too long. The agreement can
be shortened: I’ve have made them as short as one letter sized page. The
problem with the short agreements is they cannot cover all of the issues
which need to be covered and leave a broker exposed in some areas. However,
if the choice is using a one page agreement or no agreement, by all means
use the short one.
If you absolutely refuse to use a buyer representation agreement, consider
having your lawyer prepare a “consent to serve as intermediary” form. That
will at least give you some protection when you are serving as intermediary.
I do not believe there is a promulgated form for this, so you will have to
have one prepared.
If you elect to have an intermediary consent form prepared it must list the
responsibilities of an intermediary as specified in the statute. The
agreement must also contain the right to appoint an agent to “communicate
with and give advice to...” a party if the broker intends to allow an agent
within the office to consult with and give advice to the buyer and another
agent to provide the same service to the seller.
I know many of you do not like the rules in this area. However, I want you
to realize that the parties who will be penalized for not getting the proper
documentation is you and your broker; not the buyer and not the seller Okay,
enough preaching from me.