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SPONSOR: |
Rep. Hudson & Rep. Valihura & Sen. Sokola; |
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Reps. Hocker, Lavelle,
Mulrooney, Schwartzkopf, Stone, Thornburg, Viola; Sens. Bonini, Copeland,
Peterson |
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HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 143rd GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
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HOUSE
BILL NO. 122 |
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AN ACT TO AMEND TITLE 24 OF THE |
Section 1. Amend § 2931(a), Title
24 of the Delaware Code, by striking the first sentence thereof in its entirety
and by substituting in lieu thereof the following:
“All
licensees in a common law agency relationship must disclose, in writing, whom
they represent.”.
Section 2. Amend § 2931, Title 24
of the Delaware Code, by inserting therein the following new subsection:
“(d) Licensees
shall not function in the capacity of a common law agent for transactions
concerning owner occupied residential property unless they have established
that relationship in writing and the company policy of the Brokerage
Organization is to represent only the seller or buyer as a single agent for
each transaction and never as a dual agent.”
Section 3. Amend § 2901(a), Title
24 of the Delaware Code, by striking paragraph (2) thereof in its entirety and
by substituting in lieu thereof the following:
“(2) ‘Real
estate broker’ or ‘Broker’ means any person who holds a broker’s certificate
from the commission and who, for a compensation or valuable consideration, is
self employed or is employed, either directly or indirectly by a Broker Owner,
Broker of Record, or Brokerage Organization to sell or offer to sell, or to buy
or to offer to buy, or to negotiate the purchase, sale, or exchange of real
estate or to lease or rent or offer for rent any real estate, or to negotiate
leases or rental agreements thereof or of the improvements thereon, as a whole
or partial vocation. This definition
shall not apply to an ‘auctioneer’ as that term is defined in § 2301(a)(3) of
Title 30.”
Section 4. Amend § 2901(a), Title
24 of the Delaware Code, by striking paragraph (3) thereof in its entirety and
by substituting in lieu thereof the following:
“(3) ‘Real
Estate Salesperson’ or ‘Salesperson’ means any person who holds a salesperson
certificate from the commission and who, for a compensation or valuable
consideration, is employed, either directly or indirectly by a Broker, Broker
Owner, Broker of Record, or Brokerage Organization to sell or offer to sell, or
to buy or offer to buy, or to negotiate the purchase, sale or exchange of real
estate, or to lease or rent or offer for rent any real estate, or to negotiate
leases or rental agreements thereof or of the improvements thereon, as a whole
or partial vocation. This definition
shall not apply to an ‘auctioneer’ as that term is defined in § 2301(a)(3) of
Title 30.”
Section
5. Amend § 2901(a), Title 24 of the Delaware Code, by inserting therein the
following new paragraphs:
“(8) ‘Broker
of Record’ means that individual broker who is primarily responsible for the day
to day management of a real estate brokerage office.
(9) ‘Brokerage
Organization’ means that individual or entity which is not licensed but is
acting as a broker under § 2910 of this title.
(10) ‘Broker
Owner’ means the licensed Broker who is also an owner of the Brokerage
Organization but does not included owners, partners, members, shareholders or
other holders of an equity interest who do not actively participate in the
brokerage business of the organization.
(11) ‘Client’
means the principal in a statutory agency or common law agency relationship.
(12) ‘Consumer’
or ‘Prospect’ means a member of the public who has not yet become a ‘Client’ or
‘Customer’.
(13) ‘Customer’
means someone working with a Broker or Salesperson as a potential buyer,
seller, exchangor, tenant, or landlord of real property or is consulting with a
Broker or Salesperson in one of these capacities for the purpose of entering
into a Brokerage agreement or transaction, but who is not yet in the statutory
agency or common law agency relationship of principal and agent with the Broker
or Salesperson.
(14) ‘Consumer
Information Statement’ or ‘CIS’ means the disclosure form required by § 2972 of
this title.
(15) ‘Licensee’ means a person licensed
under this Chapter as a Broker or Salesperson without implying what legal
relationship they have with a consumer.
(16) ‘Ministerial Task’ means a task that
does not involve discretion or the exercise of the licensee’s own judgment for
example:
a. performing tasks
for a Client or Customer before or after the signing of an agreement of sale or
lease such as arranging an inspection; or
b. assisting other people to perform their part of the
transaction such as providing information to the mortgage lender.
(17) ‘Statutory Agent’ or ‘Agent’ means a
licensee functioning as principal in an agency relationship created according
to Subchapter IV as an independent contractor and not as a fiduciary. The Agent offers products and services to the
public to make a market in real estate by bringing buyer and seller, or
landlord and tenant together for the transaction and assisting the parties with
advice, assistance with negotiations, and performing Ministerial Tasks to
complete the transaction. When a
Licensee is referred to as an ‘Agent’ it shall be presumed that the licensee is
a Statutory Agent unless specifically referred to as a common law agent.
Section 6. Amend Chapter 29, Title 24 of the Delaware Code, by inserting
therein a new Subchapter IV thereto as follows:
“Subchapter
IV Business Relationships with Consumers
§ 2971. Applicability,
interpretation, and the common law of agency.
§ 2972. Consumer Information
Statement; confidentiality.
§ 2973. Broker and Salesperson as
a Statutory Agent.
§ 2974. Inspectors or
Investigations by a Statutory Agent.
§ 2975. Internet and World Wide
Web.
§ 2976. Compensation agreements.
§ 2977. Vicarious liability;
protections when working with a Statutory Agent.
§ 2978. Commencement and
termination of duties.
§ 2979. Duty to cooperate.
§ 2971. Applicability,
interpretation, and the common law of agency
(a)
This Subchapter applies to licensees in their business
relationships with Consumers, Customers, and Clients for all types of real
estate transactions whether they are sales, leases, exchanges, management of
real estate for others, or real estate counseling conducted by real estate
licensees. In applying this subchapter
to leasing transactions, the word “Landlord” may be substituted for “Seller”,
the word “Tenant” may be substituted for “Buyer”, and the word “Lease” may be
substituted for “Agreement of Sale” where applicable. The terms “Rental Agreement” and “Lease” may
be used interchangeably.
(b)
The common law of agency relative to brokerage
relationships in real estate transactions established pursuant to this Chapter
is expressly abrogated for any real estate licensee functioning as a Broker,
Salesperson, Broker of Record, Broker Owner, or Brokerage Organization as
defined in this chapter as a Statutory Agent.
This chapter is intended to occupy completely the field of law relative
to brokerage relationships for those real estate transactions with the
licensee(s) functioning as Statutory Agents.
For those areas where the public, licensees, regulators, or courts need
further guidance as to the conduct of an Agent, the Clients and Customers, the
law governing independent contractor relationships shall apply to the extent it
is not inconsistent with the provisions of this Chapter. For transactions where the consumer hires a
Broker as a common law agent, and the Broker agrees in writing to become the
consumer’s common law agent, the common law of agency applies to the extent it
is not inconsistent with the provisions of this chapter.
§ 2972. Consumer
Information Statement; confidentiality.
(a)
The Real Estate Commission shall establish by regulation
a Consumer Information Statement (CIS).
The Commission may provide alternative Consumer Information Statements
for residential properties, properties that do not contain any residential
units, commercial transactions, property management, or other brokerage
situations as the Commission deems appropriate. At a minimum, the form shall
provide a summary of what a Broker and Salesperson are permitted or prohibited
from doing as provided by § 2973 and § 2974 of this title. The CIS shall explain the circumstances when
the consumer may hire the licensee as a common law agent, but that this would
require other detailed disclosures of conflicts of interests and could involve
significant potential legal liability and financial risk for the consumer.
(b)
The Consumer Information Statement required by this
Chapter shall be delivered to the consumer no later than the first scheduled
appointment or showing of a property (whichever is earlier) unless they have
already been given the CIS by another licensee involved with the
transaction. The licensee shall give the
consumer an opportunity to read the CIS before the consumer completes and signs
it. The licensee shall retain a copy of
the CIS for the file of the Broker of Record and the consumer shall be given a
copy. A listing licensee who knows that
the buyer is working with another licensee is not required to give that buyer a
CIS. A licensee working with a buyer who
knows that the seller is working with another licensee is not required to give
a CIS to that seller. If a consumer
refuses to sign the CIS, the licensee may indicate on the licensee’s copy the
date it was provided to the consumer.
For a transaction begun or conducted without a face to face meeting, the
licensee shall provide the CIS with other papers sent to the consumer by mail
or by electronic transmission.
(c)
The CIS shall be available to the consumer at open
houses, but does not need to be personally presented by the licensee and signed
by the consumer unless the consumer asks for more than factual information
about the property or expresses interest in making an offer on the property
during the open house.
(d)
There is no form of Brokerage relationship and no
duties between a licensee and consumer other than the duties of confidentiality
required by § 2973(c) until the Consumer Information Statement is completed and
received by the consumer and if applicable, the listing agreement or other
brokerage agreement is signed.
(e)
Nonrenewable leases of 120 days or less are exempt from
the requirement to provide the CIS to the potential tenant; provided, however,
that the duties of confidentiality required by § 2973(c) and the rest of this
chapter still apply to those leases. The
Broker of Record may still choose to provide the CIS as a matter of office
policy.
§ 2973 Broker and Salesperson as a Statutory Agent.
(a) Licensee is a Statutory Agent and Broker may
designate others. -- Unless specifically hired as a common law agent
by a written brokerage agreement, a licensee is a Statutory Agent and not common
law agent for any party. The Broker
Owner or Broker of Record may from time to time designate one or more Brokers
or Salespersons licensed under that Broker of Record or Broker Owner to be the
designated Broker(s) or Salesperson(s) of a Client or Clients to the exclusion
of all others in the Brokerage Organization.
Performing the functions of a Statutory Agent as described in this
chapter and rules and regulations of the Commission does not automatically or
by implication create a common law agency relationship. Subsections (b) through (f) of this section
do not apply to a common law agency relationship. Subsections (b) through (f) set forth how a
Broker and Salesperson work for Clients, with Customers, and interact with the
public as a Statutory Agent (or Agent) in the capacity of an independent
contractor and not as a common law agent.
(b) Obligations and responsibilities.
-- A Broker Owner, Broker of Record, Brokerage Organization, Broker and
Salesperson shall to the extent applicable to their functions have the
following obligations and responsibilities.
(1)
Performing the duties required by this chapter;
(2)
Performing the terms of the written brokerage
agreement, if any;
(3)
Exercising reasonable skill and care as a Broker or
Salesperson;
(4)
Advising the parties to obtain expert advice on
material matters about which the Broker or Salesperson knows but the specifics
of which are beyond the expertise of such Broker or Salesperson;
(5)
Accounting in a timely manner for all money and property
received;
(6)
Helping to keep the parties informed regarding the
progress of the transaction;
(7)
Performing Ministerial Tasks to assist the parties in
complying with the terms and conditions of any contract;
(8)
Disclosing to all prospective buyers or tenants any adverse
material facts actually known by the Broker or Salesperson;
(9)
Informing the parties that they shall not be
vicariously liable for acts of the Broker or Salesperson;
(10)
Informing the parties that notice given to the Broker
or Salesperson is considered notice to the party;
(11)
Informing the parties that oral or written statements
made by a Broker or Salesperson without the consent of the party do not bind
the party and may not be relied upon by anyone as binding a party. As such, all statements and negotiations
shall need to be authorized by or signed by the parties themselves to be
binding on the parties unless otherwise stated in the Brokerage Agreement,
Agreement of Sale, Lease, or power of
attorney;
(12)
Complying with all requirements of this chapter and any
rules promulgated pursuant to this chapter;
(13)
Complying with any applicable federal, state, or local
laws, rules, regulations, or ordinances; and
(14)
Following fair housing and civil rights laws and
regulations.
(c) Confidentiality. -- The
following information shall not be disclosed by a Broker Owner, Broker of
Record, Brokerage Organization, Broker, or Salesperson without the informed
consent of the affected party:
(1)
That a buyer or tenant is willing to pay more than the
purchase price or lease rate offered for the property;
(2)
That a seller or landlord is willing to accept less
than the asking price or lease rate for the property;
(3)
What the personal motivating factors are for any party
to a transaction if the party requests them to be kept confidential;
(4)
That a seller, buyer, landlord, or tenant will agree to
terms other than those offered;
(5)
Any material confidential information about the parties
or property unless disclosure is required by statute or regulation or failure
to disclose such information would constitute fraud or intentional
misrepresentation;
(6)
Any facts or suspicions regarding circumstances which
may psychologically impact or stigmatize any real property pursuant to § 2930
unless required to be disclosed by § 2930; or
(7)
Any facts or suspicions that any party or someone in
the community is a registered sex offender under Title 11 Delaware Code
Subchapter III as amended from time to time, but if asked shall refer the
person to the Delaware State Police to seek this information.
(d) Actions permitted by Broker and
Salesperson. -- A Broker Owner, Broker of Record, Broker, and Salesperson
may do the following as an Agent without breaching any obligation, duty, or
responsibility to a Client or Customer:
(1)
List and advertise competing properties for sale or
lease;
(2)
Show Clients or Customers alternative properties not
owned by Broker’s other Clients;
(3)
Show properties in which one Client or Customer is
interested to other Clients or Customers;
(4)
Disseminate information that is generally available to
licensees. For example, providing
information on comparable sales and the licensee’s interpretation, advice, and
opinion about this information with the Client or Customer retaining the
authority to decide what to do with this information;
(5)
Assist buyers and sellers in preparing offers and
counteroffers providing the forms used advise the parties that they may seek
legal advice prior to signing.
Presenting all offers and counteroffers in a timely manner regardless of
whether the property is subject to a contract for sale, lease or letter of
intent unless instructed otherwise by the Client;
(6)
Develop negotiating strategies or options for how to
proceed with a transaction;
(7)
Perform Ministerial Tasks;
(8)
Serve as a single agent, subagent, or disclosed dual
agent for the same parties in different transactions or different parties
concerning the same property. For
example, the licensee could be a Statutory Agent for the sellers in one
transaction and a common law agent for the same people as buyers in another
transaction.
(9)
Cooperate with other Brokers; however, for owner
occupied residential property they shall not engage any common law subagents
from other companies, Brokers, or
Brokerage Organizations.
(10)
Disclose information concerning a transaction among the
designated Broker, designated Salesperson(s), Broker Owner, Broker of Record,
and office staff working for the Brokerage organization on that transaction.
(11)
Provide Customers with factual information they
request. Provide Clients with relevant factual information. Tell Clients about
their choices of how to proceed and provide them with relevant information.
Provide Clients with information and advice when presented with questions from
the Client or a request for advice.
(e) No imputed knowledge. -- There is no imputation of
knowledge or information by operation of law among or between the Consumers,
Customers, Clients, Broker Owner, Broker of Record, Broker, Salesperson,
Brokerage Organization and other licensees or persons within an organization.
(f) Notice.
– Notice as defined by law or in the agreement of sale or lease given to a
party shall be considered effective notice.
Unless specified otherwise in the agreement of sale or lease, notice
only given to a Designated Broker or Designated Salesperson shall also be
considered effective notice to the Client of that Broker or Salesperson. Notice to the Broker Owner or Broker of
Record is not considered notice to the designated Broker, designated
Salesperson, or Client. Notice only to
the designated Broker or designated Salesperson is not considered notice to the
Broker Owner, Broker of Record, or the rest of the Brokerage Organization.
§ 2974 Inspections or Investigations by a Statutory Agent.
(a)
Inspection of 1-4 family residential property.
(1)
Inspection and
Disclosure by the Licensee. -- Licensees do not have a duty to conduct an
independent intrusive inspection of the property and have no duty to
independently verify the accuracy or completeness of any statement made by a
seller, landlord, or any independent inspector; provided, however, that a
licensee assigned by the listing Broker or a home inspector walks through the
readily accessible parts of the buildings on the property to make a visual
inspection of the readily accessible areas and reads the Seller’s Disclosure of
Real Property Condition Report to be sure it includes all adverse material
facts about the property actually seen or known by such licensee or home
inspector. The listing licensee shall
take reasonable steps to disclose to the consumer, customer, or client any
material defects as defined by the Seller’s Disclosure of Real Property
Condition Report when applicable and which are actually known by the listing
licensee who walked through the property.
If these defects are listed on the Seller’s Disclosure of Real Property
Condition Report, then providing that report to the Consumer, Customer, or
Client shall fully satisfy this disclosure requirement for the seller’s or
buyer’s licensee(s), Broker Owner(s), Broker(s) of Record, and Brokerage
Organization(s).
(2)
Disclosure upon re-listing.
– Where a listing agreement for a seller is terminated before a sale is
completed and then the same property is re-listed with the same Broker or
Brokerage Organization within six months, the Broker shall ensure that any
defect actually known by the licensee previously designated to work with the
seller is disclosed by the seller on the Seller’s Disclosure of Real Property
Condition Report. This duty does not
continue to listings of the property for new owners. This paragraph does not apply to any property
re-listed with a different Brokerage Organization.
(b)
Inspection of other types of property. -- If the transaction is
excluded or not covered by the Buyer Property Protection Act (6 Del C. Chapter
25, Subchapter VII), the licensees’ duties of disclosure may be satisfied by
the seller offering the property in “as is” condition making whatever
disclosures the seller is obligated by law to make with no disclosures required
by the Brokers or Salespersons except adverse material facts about the property
itself actually known by such Brokers or Salespersons and which could not be
ascertained or discovered by a buyer or tenant through reasonable and diligent
inspections of the property or reasonable inquiries concerning the property.
(c)
Financial information. -- Licensees do not have a duty to conduct an
independent investigation of the Consumer’s, Client’s, or Customer’s financial
condition and do not have a duty to independently verify the accuracy or
completeness of financial statements made by the Consumer, Client or Customer
or any independent inspector, auditor, or lender, but if the licensee has
actual knowledge of false financial information, the licensee shall advise the
party to correct it and shall not pass on the information known to be false.
§ 2975 Internet and World Wide Web.
Entering
a name and email address on an internet or world wide web site is sufficient to
establish a broker-consumer relationship for the use of that system, but does
not in of itself create a broker-Customer or Client relationship for any other
purpose. The Broker may deliver the CIS
by the internet or world wide web and the consumer may acknowledge receipt of
it electronically. However, an exclusive
business relationship or obligation for the consumer to pay any compensation
may only be created by a written brokerage agreement signed by the consumer as
a separate document. If the brokerage
agreement is signed electronically it may not be part of a general consent to
the terms of use of an internet or world wide web site or other electronic
device, but must be a conspicuous separate document.
§ 2976 Compensation
agreements.
(a)
Written brokerage agreements. -- Nothing in this
chapter obligates a buyer, tenant, seller or landlord to pay compensation to a
Broker or Brokerage Organization unless that party has entered into a written
brokerage agreement with the Broker or Brokerage Organization specifying the
compensation terms. The compensation
agreement may specify that the Brokerage Organization, Broker Owner, Broker of
Record, Broker and Salespersons may cooperate with other licensees. Brokers or Brokerage Organizations may
compensate other Brokers or Brokerage Organizations participating in the
transaction without further permission of the party. The source of compensation
does not by itself determine brokerage relationships. If a brokerage agreement contemplated one
type of transaction such as a sale, but then through the course of continuous negotiations
the initial transaction changes to another type of transaction such as a lease,
the Broker is still entitle to compensation; however, if the initial
transaction was a lease which later became a sale, the Broker is not entitled
to compensation unless the listing agreement, other compensation agreement, or
lease provided for compensation for a later sale.
(b)
Additional terms. -- Nothing in this Chapter
shall prohibit consumers from entering into written brokerage agreements with a
Broker or Brokerage Organization which contain duties, obligations, or
responsibilities which are in addition to those specified in this chapter.
(c)
Different relationships permitted for different
transactions or jurisdictions. -- A licensee or Brokerage Organization may
work with a single party in separate transactions pursuant to different
brokerage relationships including but not limited to selling one property as a
seller’s agent and working with that seller in buying another property as
buyer’s agent, or seller’s subagent where permitted; provided, however, that
the licensee or Brokerage Organization complies with this Chapter in
establishing the relationships for each transaction. A licensee who is licensed in another
jurisdiction may function as a licensee for properties in that jurisdiction
even if the brokerage relationship is different in that jurisdiction such as a
“transaction broker”, without being considered that status in
(d)
Compensation to
entity of licensee. -- The Broker or Brokerage Organization may pay the
licensee’s individual compensation to an entity created by the licensee to receive
compensation providing the entity is either already approved by the Real Estate
Commission as a Brokerage Organization or the entity does not need to be
approved because it does not engage in the brokerage business but is only
established for business purposes to receive the licensee’s compensation. The Salesperson or Broker paid by the
Brokerage Organization may employ licensed or unlicensed staff or team members
who shall be paid an hourly wage, salary, or commission according to their
agreement with the employing Salesperson or Broker.
§ 2977 Vicarious liability protections when
working with a Statutory Agent.
(a)
A Client shall not be liable for a wrongful act, error,
omission, or misrepresentation of the Brokerage Organization, Broker Owner,
Broker of Record, Broker or Salesperson except to the extent the Client had
actual knowledge of the wrongful act, error, omission, or misrepresentation.
(b)
A Brokerage Organization, Broker Owner, Broker of
Record, Broker and Salesperson shall not be liable for a wrongful act, error,
omission, or misrepresentation of the Client except to the extent the Broker
Owner, Broker of Record, Broker, or Salesperson had actual knowledge of the
wrongful act, error, omission, or misrepresentation.
(c)
Nothing in this section shall be construed to diminish
or limit any of the other duties or responsibilities of the Brokerage
Organization, Broker Owner, Broker of Record, Broker, or Salesperson under this
chapter, or the rules promulgated hereunder.
(d)
This section does not otherwise limit the liability of
a Brokerage Organization, Broker Owner or Broker of Record, for an act, error,
or omission of a Broker or Salesperson licensed through that Brokerage
Organization, Broker Owner, or Broker of Record.
(e)
This section does not apply if the licensee or
Brokerage Organization is hired as a common law agent.
§ 2978 Commencement and termination of duties.
(a)
Common Law Agent -- The duties of a licensee as
a common law agent and corresponding liabilities of the client begin and
terminate based upon the common law of agency.
(b)
Commencement of duties for a Statutory Agent. --
There is no form of brokerage relationship and no duties between a Broker or
Salesperson and Consumer other than the duties of confidentiality required by §
2973(c) until the Consumer Information Statement is completed and signed by the
Customer or Client and if applicable, the listing agreement or other brokerage
agreement is signed.
(c)
Duties of a Statutory Agent after termination.
-- A Brokerage Organization, Broker Owner, Broker of Record, Broker and
Salesperson, owe no further duty or obligation to the Customer or Client after
termination, expiration, completion or performance of the transaction or other
termination of the brokerage relationship, except the duties of:
(1) Accounting in a timely manner for all
money and property related to, and received during the relationship; and
(2) Treating as confidential information
provided by the Client during the course of the relationship that may
reasonably be expected to have a negative impact on the Client’s real estate
activity unless:
a.
The Client to whom the information pertains grants
written consent;
b.
Disclosure of the information, such as defects actually
known by the Licensee or previously disclosed by the seller on the Seller’s
Disclosure of Real Property Condition Report, is required by law;
c.
The information is made public or becomes public by the
words or conduct of the Client to whom the information pertains or from a
source other than the Brokerage Organization, Broker Owner, Broker of Record,
Broker or Salesperson; or
d.
Disclosure is necessary to defend the Brokerage
Organization, Broker Owner, Broker of Record, Broker or Salesperson against an
action of wrongful conduct in an administrative or judicial proceeding or
before a committee of a professional association.
§
2979. Duty to cooperate.
(a)
Brokers and Salespersons shall cooperate with all other
Brokers and Salespersons involved in a transaction except when cooperation is
not in the Client’s or Customer’s best interest. The obligation to cooperate does not include
any obligation to share commissions or to otherwise compensate another Broker
or Salesperson.
(b)
In order to cooperate, Brokers and Salespersons shall
be reasonably available when requested by their Client, their Customer, or the
cooperating Broker or Salesperson to:
(1)
Accept delivery of and present to the Client or
Customer offers and counteroffers to buy, sell, or lease the
Client’s/Customer’s property, or the property the Client or Customer seeks to
purchase or lease;
(2)
Assist the Client or Customer in developing,
communicating, negotiating, and presenting offers, counteroffers, and notices
that relate to offers and counteroffers until the Agreement of Sale or Lease is
signed and all contingencies are satisfied or waived; and
(3)
Answer the Client’s or Customer’s questions relating to
the offers, counteroffers, notices, negotiations, and contingencies; and
(4)
Hold the deposit money in escrow.”
Section
7. If any clause, sentence, section,
subsection, provision or part of this Act, or the application thereof to any
set of facts or circumstances, shall be adjudged to be unconstitutional or
invalid for any reason by any court of competent jurisdiction, such judgment
shall not impair, invalidate or affect the remainder of this Act which shall
remain in full force and effect, and the application of the provision in
question to other persons not similarly situated or to other circumstances
shall not be affected thereby.
Section 8. This Act shall become effective nine months following its enactment into law and shall be applicable to all Brokerage Agreements entered into thereafter.
SYNOPSIS
|
The
purpose of this Act is to provide the consumer and real estate broker with an
alternative to the common law of agency.
The Delaware Court of Chancery has been critical of creating a common
law agency relationship for a real estate transaction. In the case Wary v. Kraft, et.al. C.A. No. 10933 the
Vice-Chancellor stated, “The sellers are also more to be pitied than
castigated. It was their misfortune to hire an agent who had apparent
authority to speak for them, and who, at the very least, induced the Warys to
rely on her to their detriment.” In
other words, because the real estate broker was a common law agent, she could
get the seller in trouble. This Act offers an alternative by a licensee being
an agent as described in this bill without creating a common law agency
relationship. For properties that are
not owner occupied residential, the consumer may still hire a broker as a
common law agent. For owner occupied
residential property, companies with a policy of only representing the seller
or the buyer as a single agent for each transaction, and never as a dual
agent, may be hired as a common law agent. Section
1 of this bill continues the identical Sections
2 specifies when a licensee may be a common law agent. Sections
3 and 4 update the definitions of Broker and Salesperson to make clear who
employs them. Section
5 defines terms. Most importantly,
“Statutory Agent” or simply “Agent” is defined as the offering of products
and services to the public to make a market in real estate by bringing buyer
and seller, or landlord and tenant, together for the transaction and
assisting the parties by providing advice, assisting with negotiations, and
performing ministerial tasks to complete a transaction. This relationship is a statutory form of
agency where the agent is not a fiduciary, but is an independent contractor. The Restatement of the Law of Agency
recognizes the status of an agent who is an independent contractor and not a
fiduciary. Proposed
section 2971 provides for the continuation of the common law of agency if a
consumer wants to hire the Broker as a common law agent, but provides for
this Act to apply to most situations where the consumer will choose to hire
the Broker as an Agent whose conduct is governed by this Act. The Broker and Salespersons are working as independent
contractors, not as common law agents. Proposed
section 2972 provides for a new Consumer Information Statement to be given to
all consumers to explain real estate brokerage and what to expect from the
Broker and Salespersons. This Section
also protects the consumer by requiring confidentiality from the first
contact with the consumer. Proposed
section 2973 explains the obligations, responsibilities and duties owed to
the Customer by the Broker and Salesperson.
This section also allows the Brokerage Company to designate which
Broker(s) or Salesperson(s) in the company will be responsible for working
for the Client. This section also
protects the Customer by requiring each party to a real estate transaction to
be responsible for what he or she knows, but not to be liable for something
only known to another party. Proposed
section 2974 makes it clear that real estate licensees are neither building
code inspectors making an intrusive inspection of the property nor
accountants auditing the finances of the parties. There are other professionals available to
make inspections of properties and to verify the accuracy of financial
statements of the parties. Proposed
section 2975 allows the consumer to obtain certain real estate information
from the internet without becoming a Customer or Client of the Broker. Proposed
section 2976 requires compensation agreements to be in writing. If the consumer has not signed a
compensation agreement, they may not be charged anything by the Broker. This section also allows the consumer to
add additional terms to the Brokerage agreement to expand the Broker’s
duties, obligations, or responsibilities beyond those specified in this Act. Proposed
section 2977 protects the consumer and the Broker from the wrongful actions
of another party unless they actually knew that the other party was doing
something wrong. This continues to
hold the guilty party responsible, but protects the innocent party from
wrongful acts of other people. Proposed
section 2978 clarifies when the Brokerage relationship begins, ends, and what
duties of the Broker continue after the termination of the relationship. Proposed
section 2979 clarifies the duty of Brokers and Salespersons to cooperate with
other Brokers and Salespersons in their client’s best interests. The obligation to cooperate does not
include any obligation to share commissions or to otherwise compensate
another Broker or Salesperson. This
section also specifies what Brokers and Salespersons must be available to do
on the request of their Client, their Customer, or a cooperating Broker or
Salesperson in order to ensure such cooperation. This Act shall become effective nine months following its enactment into law and shall be applicable to all Brokerage Agreements entered into thereafter. |