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Short Sales: When Is an Offer ‘Accepted’?
Posted on Apr 30th, 2009
When should you disclose a seller's acceptance of short sale offer?
By Bruce Aydt | May 2009
Q. I recently sold a property that was heading into foreclosure and the buyer’s agent wanted the listing changed to "pending" in the MLS as soon as the seller accepted the offer. But shouldn’t the status be changed only after the offer is approved by the lender?
A. With distressed properties, there can be confusion about when the offer is "accepted." The seller is still the legal owner of the property in most cases, and must be the first to accept an offer. Yet the lender also must approve or agree to the transaction, since it’s being asked to take less than what’s owed on the mortgage. When the seller accepts an offer under these conditions and a contract is formed, the offer is "accepted," though it has at least one unresolved contingency: the lender’s approval of the short sale.
Many MLS systems require listing brokers to change a listing out of "active" status upon the acceptance of any offer—including offers subject to lender approval, as in a short sale. Whether, and when, the listing status must be changed is a matter of MLS rules.
Regardless of what the MLS requires, though, the Code of Ethics Standard of Practice 3-6 requires that accepted offers be disclosed: "REALTORS® shall disclose the existence of accepted offers, including offers with unresolved contingencies, to any broker seeking cooperation."
Even if your MLS doesn’t require the listing to be reclassified as "pending" or "under contract" upon acceptance of an offer in a short sale, if a cooperating broker contacts you about showing that listing to a prospect, you’re required to disclose the accepted offer.
You should consult with your seller client about what else to disclose about the accepted offer. It may be in the seller’s interest to disclose that the offer is contingent on lender approval as a short sale. This may encourage the cooperating broker to show the property, perhaps leading to another offer. If another offer is submitted, Standard of Practice 1-7 requires that you advise the seller to seek legal advice unless the offer is contingent on the termination of the accepted offer.
E-MAIL: Send ethics questions to ethics@realtors.org. We answer selected reader questions but withhold names.
Columnist Bruce Aydt, ABR®, CRB, is senior vice president and general counsel of Prudential Alliance, REALTORS®, in St. Louis and a former chair of NAR’s Professional Standards Committee. You can send him your ethics questions at ethics@realtors.org.
Reprinted from REALTOR® Magazine Online, http://www.realtor.org/realtormag, May 2009
with permission of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®. Copyright 2009. All rights reserved.
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Comments (1)
For the real estate professional working short sales the broker should know all the details before listing the property.The broker should find out if the seller has already applied to their lender, the broker should be in contact with the decision team at the lender, and the seller needs to be made aware of their rights and obligations to the short sale.If all this is in place when that offers comes in the frustration level for the seller, buyer, listing broker and buyers broker will be dramatically reduced and the chances for a successful transaction will be increased dramatically. More short sale transactions die due to the time element when the seller has not even started the process with the lender and the broker doesn't know who the decision makers are at the lender. Due diligence is paramount for successful short sales transactions.
on May 05, 2009 at 7:09 am
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