Listings Employment by Public - Part 3 - Chapters 11-14 Flashcards
Protect your broker’s right to collect a fee if a seller removes the listed property from the market or cancels the listing
An owner of real estate enters into an exclusive right to sell listing agreement, employing a broker to market the property for sale and locate a buyer to purchase the property. Compensation for the broker and their agents due diligence services is called for in a FEE PROVISION in the listing agreement. The fee provision also contains both:
- a Withdrawal from Sale clause and
- a Termination of Agency clause
Understand what events trigger the withdrawal-from-sale and termination-of-agency clauses in an exclusive listing fee provision and cause a fee to be earned
The WITHDRAW FROM SALE CLAUSE entitles the broker to be paid a full listing fee when during the listing period, the owners conduct causes the property to be:
- withdrawn from the market
- transferred to others
- further leased without the brokers consent
- made unmarketable.
Separately, the TERMINATION OF AGENCY CLAUSE entitles the broker to collect a full listing fee when the owner cancels the brokers employment during the listing period.
The seller becomes obligated to pay the broker the fee agreed to in the listing as earned when:
- the broker, through their agent, exercised diligence in the marketing of the property, and
- the seller voluntarily removes the property from the marketplace during the listing period.
On withdrawal, the fee due the broker compensates them for their lost opportunity and for the time, effort and money invested into marketing the property before the seller removed it from the market.
Negotiate a monetary settlement for the time and effort expended in due diligence efforts when a client terminates a listing agreement.
On a breach by the seller of a listing which does NOT contain a Termination of Agency clause, the terminated broker is only entitled to:
- the out-of-pocket costs expended to service the listing
- the value of the time and effort expended under the listing, called Quantum Meruit recovery
When a seller, clearly indicates they no longer desire to sell the property, the agent needs to prepare a Release and Cancellation of Employment Agreement Form for the seller to review and sign. The agreement often calls for immediate payment of the full broker fee agreed to in the listing in exchange for mutually agreeing to cancel the listing agreement.
A cancellation agreement may also call for a client to pay a broker cash compensation for their and their agents time, effort and expenses, or negotiate an appropriate hourly rate at the time of settlement.
quantum meruit
QUANTUM MERUIT is compensation paid to a broker on termination of a listing agreement set as the value of time, effort and money the broker expended acting on the employment, not based on the Lost opportunity of the employment.
Release and Cancellation of Employment Agreement
A RELEASE AND CANCELLATION OF EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENT is a form used by a broker when employed by a client under an existing listing agreement that is terminated by mutual agreement, to document the agreed to termination of the employment, cancel the listing agreement and liquidate any claims that may have arisen due to the employment.
termination-of-agency clause
The TERMINATION-OF-AGENCY CLAUSE is a provision in an exclusive listing agreement which calls for a broker fee to be earned and payable when the client cancels the employment without cause.
withdrawal-from-sale clause
A WITHDRAWAL-FROM-SALE CLAUSE is a provision in an exclusive listing agreement which entitles the broker to be paid a full listing fee when, during the listing period, the seller:
- withdrawals the property from sale,
- makes the property unmarketable,
- transfers ownership or,
- without the Brokers consent, further leases the property
Implement a safety clause provision in listing agreements to earn a fee for your marketing efforts when the client sells or buys after your employment expires
A safety clause in a listing agreement entitles the broker to the agreed fee as earned when:
- an individual has direct contact with the broker or their agent regarding the property during the listing period, called SOLICITATIONS
- the broker treats the individual as a prospective buyer due to their inquiries or conduct by handing them a package of information about the property, called NEGOTIATIONS
- negotiations with the individual terminate without resulting in there entering into an agreement to purchase the property
- the listing period expires and the broker timely registers the individual by name with the seller as a prospective buyer, and
- the individual and the seller, with or without the brokers further involvement, later commence negotiations within an agreed to period following the expiration of the listing, called the safety period, and eventually complete a sale of the property.
A safety clause in the fee provision of a listing agreement provides an additional period after the listing period expires for a broker to earn a fee.
Document and register prospective buyers or properties located during the employment to perfect your right to earn a fee on related transactions after the employment expires
Several crucial activities need to be performed by the seller’s agent to perfect the brokers right to a fee under the SAFETY CLAUSE, including:
- providing information about the listed property to any prospective buyers the broker or the buyer’s brokers have contact with
- documenting dealings with prospective buyers by maintaining a File Activity Sheet in a listing file
- registering the prospective buyers with the seller on termination of the listing by providing the seller with a list of prospective buyers in a timely manner for example within 21 days.
When registering prospective buyers with the seller, the broker whose listing contains a Broker Cooperation Provision needs to include any buyers with whom buyer’s brokers dealt. If a sale covered by the safety clause occurs, both brokers are protected and will share the fee.
The degree of involvement a broker or their agents needs to have with a buyer during the listing period in order to qualify the buyer as a prospective buyer is set by the terms of the safety clause.
At the very least, a seller’s broker or their agent is required to provide a buyer with information regarding the property to qualify as having commenced negotiations. The agent does not need to produce a written offer from a buyer for the buyer to be a prospective purchaser.
- ***The safety clause period commences on termination of the listing period. Thus, the termination of a listing commences the running of both the safety clause period and the period for putting a seller on notice of prospective buyers. A listing is terminated when:
- the seller WITHDRAWS the property from the market during the listing period
- The seller TERMINATES the agency before expiration of the listing period or
- the listing AGREEMENT EXPIRES at the end of the listing period
Whether or not the listing contains a termination of agency Claus, premature termination is to be treated as an act which commences the safety clause period.
Avoid conflicts for prospective clients with their former broker when taking a listing during a safety period under their prior listing
When a seller relists a property for sale with another broker on the expiration of a listing, a properly worded and perfected safety clause remains enforceable. Thus, a broker or their agent entering into a property listing needs to first inquire into the existence of any unexpired safety clause in a prior listing the seller had on the property with another broker.
What the new listing agent wants to avoid is exposing the seller to Multiple Fees when the property is sold under the new listing to a prospective buyer registered with the seller under the safety clause in an expired listing.
First, the new seller’s agent needs to obtain a copy of the expired listing and any list of prospective buyers registered with the seller. If a safety clause exists and remains in effect when the property is relisted, the agent needs to make some business decisions.
Negotiations conducted by the new agent with these buyers put the seller at risk of liability under the prior brokers safety clause. Prior to contacting any of these registered buyers, the new agent needs to negotiate a fee sharing agreement with the prior broker, and then document that arrangement as part of the listing process.
Or…. On expiration of a listing the seller is able to avoid the dual liability situation altogether by relisting with the same broker, rather than listing with another broker, a Relisting Advantage held by the original broker.
A broker is not entitled to a fee for merely registering the names of firms which the agent knew bought mortgages. The fee provision required the broker or their agent to be the procuring cause of a sale, not just naming, soliciting or negotiating with prospective buyers. Payment of a fee is contingent on the Brokers initiation of a transaction which is successfully completed.
A fee agreement calling for a broker to be paid only if they are procuring cause of the sale automatically voids any safety clause contained in the fee provision of a listing agreement. Thus, a SAFETY CLAUSE and a PROCURING CAUSE CLAUSE are inconsistent provisions - one or the other for recovery of a fee, but not both in the same document.
broker cooperation provision
A BROKER COOPERATION PROVISION is a clause in employment agreements entered into by brokers and their clients enabling brokers, when acting on behalf of their clients in a transaction, to share fees between themselves at the brokers discretion.
fee-sharing agreement
A FEE SHARING AGREEMENT is an agreement written or oral, between different brokerage operations to share fees earned on a transaction which are typically paid by the property owner.
procuring cause
A PROCURING CAUSE is a continuing series of negotiating activity performed by a broker or their agents during their employment by a client that, without break in continuity, results in a completed sale or purchase of the property by the client.
Sellers often confuse the workings of the safety Clause with the open listing or full listing offer theories of procuring cause. A broker is the procuring cause of a buyer and entitled to a fee when the broker holds an OPEN LISTING and they or their agent is either:
- the direct cause of a sale to a buyer
- the cause of a series of events which result in a sale to the buyer.
In one EXAMPLE a seller might claim the broker is not entitled to a fee since the buyer acquired the property through negotiations commenced by the seller after the listing expired. However a broker in this case is entitled to a fee since they were the PROCURING CAUSE of the sale. The brokers contact with the buyer set into motion and uninterrupted chain or series of events, separated only by time, which eventually resulted in a sale.
safety clause
A SAFETY CLAUSE is a provision in an exclusive listing agreement earning the broker a fee during an agreed safety period after expiration of the employment for marketing efforts with identified buyers, tenants or property, if the client sells the listed property to an identified buyer or purchases or leases an identified property during the safety period.
Note - By including safety clauses in listing agreements and registering prospective buyers, this type of dispute is avoided.
safety period
A SAFETY PERIOD is an agreed period commencing on expiration of a broker’s employment during which a broker earns a fee under safety clause conditions.