Wednesday, March 7, 2007

More About Dual Agency Conflicts of Interest (What You Get if You Hire a Buyer Agent)

A "Buyer Agent" is an agent that is supposed to be representing the buyer - but can get into Dual Agency conflict of interest situations because they and their company list property for sale. Most of the public is clueless about this fact - and the implications when their "Buyer Agent" turns into a dual agent. (And most don't receive full-disclosure up-front)

An Exclusive Buyer Agent does not list property for sale - nor does their company - ensuring that they are always looking out for their buyer's best interests.

One person e-mailed me today:

I just found this "dual agency" guide on the Internet. Questions You May Want to Ask a So-called "Buyer Agent" Before You Hire Them I'm sorry I didn't know about this guide three years ago. Being a completely uninformed consumer (like the great majority of the public) back then, I became an easy mark for two incompetent, unethical agents who failed to explain or disclose crucial material facts about Company X's (name deleted) representation policy. Now I'm a lot wiser.

The most disturbing aspect is the fact that Company X's is using the absence of a separate written contract with my so-called buyer's agent Ms. X (which she never offered to me, by the way) to argue that she NEVER had a fiduciary duty toward me--although she showed me 8-10 houses over a three-month period, called me several times a week to announce new listings, encouraged me to attend open houses at them, drove me in her car to three of them, and gave me advice on what to bid on my house of choice.

In other words, the Company X management seems to believe that Ms X's statutory violations--failure to provide the mandatory written disclosure form when showing me Company X's properties, to function as a dual agent, or to assign me an intra-company agent if she refused this role---can be grounds for claiming that she was not my buyer's agent at all, even though she openly functioned as such and testified to this effect in two depositions!

Even one of the members of her real estate team wrote in a document that she thought Ms. X was serving as a buyer's agent in the negotiating process, and even the seller of the house of choice believed she was representing me!

The concept of dual agency obviously serves the interest of real estate companies by encouraging the practice of double dipping. It is inherently deceitful and unfair. .





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