I have nothing against attorneys. In fact, we always advise our clients to
speak with an attorney about how a short sale will affect them. However, there
are concrete reasons why agents experienced with short sales typically are more
successful at negotiating a short sale than attorneys.
1) A short sale transaction will succeed or fail based on
how experienced and effective the real estate agent is, not the attorney.
The structure of the purchase and sale agreement is critical
to a successful short sale transaction. The number one reason that short sales
fail is a lack of understanding on the part of the negotiator about how the
short sale process works. Maybe they are unfamiliar with the intricacies of all the forms that need to accompany the purchase and sale agreement. Or they don't
understand how lenders manage short sales. Or they insist on including language
in the agreement that banks are not willing or able to approve. For example, a
P & S agreement we saw recently that was written by an attorney included a
25 day closing deadline. Since the average short sale takes 60 to 90 days to
close, the inclusion of this impossible deadline guaranteed the sale would not
go through, creating frustration and lost time for buyer and seller alike.
Deep understanding of the real estate process, knowing what
lenders want, qualifying buyers, setting the right price, providing constant
communication with all parties- these
are the keys to short sale success. And these are skills unique to a real estate agent who
specializes in short sales, not an attorney.
2) If you use an attorney to negotiate a short sale, will
you or your client get stuck with the bill?
All short sale negotiators are paid for their work. If the negotiator is a real estate agent,
negotiating the short sale is part of the professional service that they
provide and are compensated for through their commission. There is no additional fee to anyone.
Attorneys typically charge a fee of 1-2% of the purchase
price to negotiate a short sale. Sometimes the lender is willing to pay their
fee, but more and more often they're not. Since short sales sellers typically
don’t have the money, that leaves the listing agent, buyer or buyer's agent to
pick up the tab. The listing agent
certainly doesn't want to get stuck paying the fee. And it's tough enough to
sell a short sale property- why make it
harder by adding the possibility of additional fees to the buyer and/or their
agent?
We were recently involved in a situation where a law firm
negotiating a short sale neglected to have the listing agent or seller sign a
services contract, leaving it unclear who was responsible for paying their 1%
fee. Once the short sale was approved, the firm asked the listing agent to pay
the fee of $3,100 and threatened to not allow closing until they were paid.
If you depend on a third-party negotiator that charges an
additional fee for their service you are to a large degree at the mercy of
their process and their timing. The best way to avoid being taken hostage by a
third-party negotiator is for YOU to be in control of the sale.
The bottom line:
- We believe that short sales are first and foremost real estate transactions, and they should be handled by real estate agents who are highly experienced in short sales.
- Negotiating the short sale should be a part of the professional services that the real estate agent offers at no additional fee to anyone.
If you're looking for legal advice, see an attorney. If you're looking to sell a home, see a real
estate agent.
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