IV. Preventive
Tips for Practitioners
Always ask a prospective
buyer whether he or she is working with another broker.
- If you find out that a prospective buyer is
working with another broker, explore whether the first broker
has an exclusive contractual agreement.
- If you discover your client has been working
with another broker on the same transaction, try to ascertain
the reason why the client left the first broker and if appropriate,
make immediate contact with the broker and try to resolve the
issue. Failing to address it early on may result in you working
through a difficult escrow, closing the transaction and not getting
paid.
- Give agency disclosures (C.A.R. Form AD-11)
early in the transaction.
- Use buyer representation agreements (with or
without the brokers compensation element). This will help memorialize
the relationship and help prompt the discussion about other relationships.
If the contract includes a buyer’s commission obligation to the
broker, it will also create an incentive for the buyer to come
to you and terminate the contract prior to going to another broker.
- Never send your buyer client to other brokers
with instructions to come back when the buyer is ready to write
the offer.
- Try to accompany your clients to open houses,
but if you can’t, give your clients your cards and instruct them
to tell the agent sitting the open house that they are already
working with you and present them your card. By not accompanying
them, you take the risk that this explanation may not occur.
- Stay in close contact with your client and
be responsive during the transaction.
- If you are conducting an open house, keep a
registry of all prospective buyers including a note of whether
there was a broker with the buyer. Also, keep a record that the
agent sitting the open house asked the buyer if they were working
with an agent.
- If you have a listing where the property is
being shown by brokers when you are not present, leave a sign-in
sheet with buyers’ names and brokers’ names similar to those at
a new home development. Include dates and times in the registry.
This creates a record of who was shown the property and with which
broker.
V. Fact Patterns
The following fact patterns are NOT to be construed as
definitive outcomes for similar real-life situations. In truth, very few real-life fact
patterns would exactly match the ones below, because real-life cases
would have nuances and facts that are not and can not be addressed
in this paper. All of the facts of a particular case must
be considered by a panel to determine procuring cause. The fact
situations here are merely a guide for panelists, to demonstrate
how the factors are used in conjunction with the presumption in
favor of Closing Broker.
"Intro Broker" refers to the one who did not ultimately
write the offer.
"Closing Broker" refers to the one who wrote the offer
that was ultimately accepted and performed services through escrow
to close the transaction. Closing Broker also received the commission.
"Exclusive Buyer’s Agency Contract" refers to any contract
that creates an exclusive agency between the buyer and the agent,
such as the Exclusive Buyer Broker Compensation Contract (C.A.R.
Form AAP-11) or other form used by brokers for the same purpose.
The contract does not have to grant a commission to be exclusive.
FACT SITUATION 1 -- WRITTEN AGREEMENT
FACT SITUATION 1A
Buyer is working with several agents and is shown the property
by Intro Broker, but has no written agreement with him or her. Three
days later Buyer is shown the same property by Closing Broker, who
writes a successful offer and receives the commission.
In the absence of other material facts favoring Intro Broker,
the factors favor Closing Broker as the procuring cause. Showing
the property first is only one factor and is unlikely to overcome
the presumption in favor of Closing Broker. According to the fact
pattern, Intro Broker did not write an offer and may not have spent
a significant amount of time with Buyer. Further, the absence of
any agency agreement with Intro Broker is a factor that weighs against
him. Given the facts in this scenario, a panel would likely conclude
that Closing Broker is the procuring cause and entitled to the commission.
FACT SITUATION 1B
Same as 1A, and in addition, Intro Broker had Buyer sign a buyer
representation agreement (C.A.R. Form BR-11 or other form used for
the same purpose).
This case differs from 1A, in that Intro broker now has an agreement
that weighs in his favor. The signed buyer’s representation agreement,
by itself, however, does not resolve the issue. A panel would need
to inquire whether Closing Broker asked Buyer about an agreement
with another agent or engaged in other conduct that might create
additional factors in Intro Broker’s favor. Assuming, however, that
no other factors favor Intro Broker, a panel could find that Intro
Broker has not overcome the presumption in favor of Closing Broker,
and that Closing Broker is the procuring cause.
FACT SITUATION 1C
Intro Broker had Buyer sign an exclusive buyer's agency contract.
Intro Broker showed some properties to Buyer, but not the one that
Buyer ultimately purchased. Closing Broker asked Buyer before showing
any property to Buyer whether Buyer had signed any buyer's agency
contracts or forms other than the agency disclosure form. Buyer
replied, "Yes, I signed an exclusive buyer's agency contract,
but don't worry about it, show me some property." Closing Broker
did so. Buyer liked one of the homes shown by the Closing Broker
and asked Closing Broker to write an offer. Closing Broker then
obtained Intro Broker's agreement from Buyer and reviewed it. Closing
Broker discussed the situation with Buyer: Closing Broker told Buyer
the importance of the written agency agreement with Intro Broker
and that Buyer was exposed to paying a commission to Intro Broker.
Buyer none-the-less insisted on proceeding with Closing Broker and
said, "I'll take care of Intro Broker, don't worry." So
Closing Broker wrote the offer, which was accepted.
Intro Broker files an arbitration for the commission, claiming
Closing Broker interfered with his contract with Buyer. If the panel’s
inquiry reveals that Closing Broker did everything necessary to
protect both Intro Broker and Buyer, and there are no additional
facts showing that Closing Broker lured Buyer away from Intro Broker
or otherwise engaged in behavior that would create factors favoring
Intro Broker, the panel would probably find that Closing Broker
is the procuring cause. Their ultimate conclusion depends on how
the panel weights the various factors. It appears that Buyer may
be the culprit here, and if Intro Broker loses the procuring cause
question with Closing Broker, Intro Broker still has a contract
right to bring an action against Buyer for a commission.
FACT SITUATION 1D
Same facts as 1C, but also the property purchased was one that
Intro Broker had previously shown Buyer.
This scenario is much more difficult because there are more factors
in each broker’s favor. The outcome here, however, depends not on
the number of factors in a broker’s favor, but, instead, on how
much weight the panel gives each factor. While having shown the
same house helps Intro Broker, depending on that factor’s weight
with the panel, it still may not overcome the presumption in favor
of Closing Broker, particularly in light of his careful process
in dealing with the demanding Buyer.
FACT SITUATION 1E
Same facts as 1A, but Intro Broker has an exclusive buyer broker
compensation agreement (such as C.A.R. Form AAP-11 or other form
used for the same purpose) with Buyer. Also, Closing Broker fails
to ask Buyer if any agency form or buyer broker agreement had been
signed with a prior broker, and Buyer doesn’t volunteer the information.
In California today, a buyer's broker should always inquire if
Buyer has signed any agreement with a prior agent, and if the answer
is "yes," find out what that agreement is. While the fact
that Closing Broker closed the deal entitles him to the presumption,
the conduct of Closing Broker, and his behavior in determining the
existence of the contract, will probably have sufficient weight
to tip the procuring cause decision in favor of Intro Broker.
FACT SITUATION 2 -- OPEN HOUSES
FACT SITUATION 2A
Buyer has been shown property by Intro Broker, and Intro Broker
has no agency agreement with Buyer. Buyer goes alone to Closing
Broker's open house, which was previously shown by Intro Broker.
Buyer asks Closing Broker to write an offer for Buyer. Closing Broker
successfully does so, without inquiring about any prior agency relationship
with other agents.
In the absence of other material facts favoring Intro Broker,
it appears that the factors in favor of Intro Broker are not sufficient
to overcome the presumption that Closing Broker is the procuring
cause. Showing the property first is only one factor. According
to the fact pattern, Intro Broker did not write an offer and may
not have spent a significant amount of time with Buyer. Further,
the absence of any agency agreement with Intro Broker is a factor
that weighs against him. Given the facts in this scenario, a panel
would likely conclude that Closing Broker is the procuring cause
and entitled to the commission. Closing Broker is fortunate that
Intro Broker did not have an exclusive agency agreement with Buyer,
so Closing Broker’s failure to ask was not detrimental.
FACT SITUATION 2B
Same facts as 2A, but Closing Broker does inquire if Buyer has
been working with another agent, and Buyer says" yes,"
but never mentions that she has seen the house before. Closing Broker
determines that Buyer signed C.A.R.'s Buyer Representation Agreement
(C.A.R. Form BR-11) with Intro Broker. Buyer asks Closing Broker
to write an offer on the property, and Closing Broker successfully
does so.
Closing Broker has determined that there is no exclusive agency
with Intro Broker and does not know Buyer has seen the property
before. Absent other material facts favoring Intro Broker, Closing
Broker probably prevails. Of course, the ultimate outcome depends
on any other factors present and the weight given to them by the
panel.
Note, a question here is whether Closing Broker should have asked
Buyer if she had seen the property before. While Closing Broker’s
knowledge that Buyer had seen the property with Intro Broker is
a factor in favor of Intro Broker, the panel will have to decide
if it outweighs the presumption in favor of Closing Broker. In the
limited facts of this scenario, it probably would not. Closing Broker
has determined that Buyer had no exclusive agency with Intro Broker,
and showing the property first is only one factor to consider.
FACT SITUATION 2C
Buyer has worked only with Intro Broker and has signed an exclusive
buyer broker compensation agreement (such as C.A.R. Form AAP-11
or other form used for the same purpose) with Intro Broker. Buyer
goes alone to Closing Broker's open house, which Buyer had not seen
before. Closing Broker never inquires if Buyer has a prior agency
relationship with another agent. Buyer makes an offer on the same
property through Closing Broker.
In California today, a buyer's broker should always inquire if
Buyer has signed any agreement with a prior agent, and if the answer
is "yes," find out what that agreement is. While the fact
that Closing Broker closed the deal entitles him to the presumption,
the conduct of Closing Broker, and his behavior in determining the
existence of the contract, should have sufficient weight to tip
the procuring cause decision in favor of Intro Broker.
FACT SITUATION 2D
Same as 2C, but Closing Broker inquires and Buyer tells Closing
Broker that he/she has not signed any exclusive agency agreement.
Intro Broker files an arbitration for the commission, claiming
Closing Broker interfered with his contract with Buyer. If the panel’s
inquiry reveals that Closing Broker did everything necessary to
protect both Intro Broker and Buyer, and there are no additional
material facts favoring Intro Broker, the panel would probably find
that Closing Broker is the procuring cause. It appears that Buyer
has lied intentionally to Closing Broker, which could weigh heavily
in favor of Closing Broker. If Intro Broker loses the procuring
cause question with Closing Broker, Intro Broker still has the right
to bring an action against Buyer for a commission.
FACT SITUATION 3 -- CLOSING BROKER INDUCES BUYER TO LEAVE
INTRO BROKER
FACT SITUATION 3A
Buyer is working with Intro Broker and is very interested in
a house shown by Intro Broker. Buyer discusses the home with a friend,
Closing Broker, who happens to be licensed. Closing Broker says
he can get Buyer a better deal, by rebating 1% of his commission
to Buyer. Closing Broker shows the property again, and then writes
the offer. Closing Broker has no written agency agreement with Buyer.
Absent other material facts favoring Closing Broker, it appears
that Intro Broker is entitled to the commission. Closing Broker
intentionally interfered with Intro Broker's agency relationship,
which is a heavy factor in favor of Intro Broker. Such intentional
interference probably overcomes the presumption in favor of Closing
Broker, and carries the burden of proof for Intro Broker. Whether
Closing Broker shows the property again is not a material fact in
and of itself.
FACT SITUATION 3B
Buyer has been working with Intro Broker, who has shown numerous
houses over a period of several weeks. However, Buyer is dissatisfied
with Intro Broker's efforts, especially because Intro Broker fails
to return phone calls promptly. While looking at open houses, Buyer
meets Closing Broker. Closing Broker inquires of Buyer whether Buyer
is working with any other agents. Buyer says yes, and also says,
"but I'm not really happy with Intro Broker," and goes
on to state why. Closing Broker also ascertains that Buyer has not
signed an exclusive buyer's agency agreement. Buyer is uncertain
whether Buyer can in good conscience abandon Intro Broker, but Closing
Broker convinces Buyer that it's OK. Closing Broker shows Buyer
several homes, but none are appealing, so Buyer asks to see a home
previously shown by Intro Broker. Closing Broker successfully writes
an offer on that home for Buyer.
Intro Broker has no exclusive agency agreement, which Closing
Broker ascertained. Further, Buyer's dissatisfaction with Intro
Broker is a material fact in this case. If the panel’s inquiry reveals
that Closing Broker did everything necessary to protect both Intro
Broker and Buyer, and there are no additional material facts favoring
Intro Broker, the panel would likely find that Closing Broker is
the procuring cause.
FACT SITUATION 3C
Same facts as 3B, but there is an exclusive buyer broker compensation
agreement (such as C.A.R. Form AAP-11 or other form used for the
same purpose) with Intro Broker, and Closing Broker counseled Buyer
as to its meaning and importance.
While Intro Broker did have an exclusive buyer's agency agreement,
Closing Broker made the proper inquiry and counseled Buyer as in
Fact Situation 1C. Buyer's dissatisfaction with Intro Broker remains
a key. If the panel’s inquiry reveals that Closing Broker did everything
necessary to protect both Intro Broker and Buyer, and there are
no additional material facts favoring Intro Broker, the panel would
probably find that Closing Broker is the procuring cause. If Intro
Broker loses the question of procuring cause to Closing Broker,
he or she still may have a contract right against Buyer.
FACT SITUATION 4 -- INTRO BROKER’S PRIOR OFFER FAILED
FACT SITUATION 4A
Intro Broker has written an offer for Buyer, but it failed and
all negotiations on the property were terminated, because Buyer
thought the seller’s counteroffer was too high. Buyer consults with
Closing Broker, who, after determining that Buyer does not wish
to work with Intro Broker any longer, convinces Buyer that the seller
was not asking too much in light of current market conditions. Closing
Broker rewrites the same offer, and when seller counters at a price
Closing Broker believes is good, Closing Broker convinces Buyer
it is a fair price and successfully writes a counteroffer.
Intro Broker has no exclusive agency agreement, which Closing
Broker ascertained. Further, Closing Broker asked the right questions
and learned that Buyer no longer wanted to work with Intro Broker
– a factor in Closing Broker’s favor. Showing the property first
is only one factor here. Although Intro Broker also receives a factor
for the prior offer on the property, Intro Broker may not be able
to overcome the presumption in favor of Closing Broker. If the panel’s
inquiry reveals that Closing Broker did everything necessary to
protect both Intro Broker and Buyer, and there are no additional
material facts favoring Intro Broker, the panel would likely find
that Closing Broker is the procuring cause.
FACT SITUATION 4B
Same as 4A and, in addition, Intro Broker had an exclusive buyer
broker compensation agreement (such as C.A.R. Form AAP-11 or other
form used for the same purpose) with Buyer, which had not expired
at the time of Closing Broker's writing the offer for Buyer. Buyer
did disclose the agency agreement to Closing Broker.
Although Intro Broker did have an exclusive buyer's agency agreement,
Closing Broker made the proper inquiry. In addition, while Intro
Broker’s prior offer on the property is a factor in his or her favor,
the reason Buyer decided to leave Intro Broker is also a factor.
If the panel’s inquiry reveals that Closing Broker did everything
necessary to protect both Intro Broker and Buyer, and there are
no additional material facts favoring Intro Broker, the panel would
probably find that Closing Broker is the procuring cause. If Intro
Broker loses the question of procuring cause to Closing Broker,
he or she still may have a contract right against Buyer.
VI. Frequently Asked Questions
Q: 1. Does the arbitration always result
in an "all or nothing" award or may arbitrators split
the award between the two disputing brokers?
A: In most cases, sound analysis will lead arbitrators to conclude
that only one broker was the procuring cause, and that broker should
get the entire commission. Further, arbitrators should not avoid
the "all or nothing" decision, just because it is a hard
one to make. Nonetheless, after all factors have been weighed, under
some fact patterns, arbitrators may decide to split the commission.
Q: 2. Must a listing broker be named as
a party to an arbitration complaint when he or she has contractually
offered the commission to other brokers through the MLS?
A: Although the listing broker offered the compensation, generally,
only the disputing cooperating brokers are parties to the arbitration.
A listing broker can be named, however, and it is up to the complainant
to determine the proper parties to the complaint.
Q: 3. Must the respective responsible brokers
for the agents in a commission dispute be named in the arbitration
complaint?
A: California Code of Ethics and Arbitration Manual require that
the responsible broker be named as a complainant to an arbitration
complaint. There is no similar requirement for the respondent, but
it is advisable to have the responsible brokers on both sides of
the dispute.
Q: 4. Does a broker with an exclusive buyer
broker compensation agreement (such as C.A.R. Form AAP-11 or other
form used for the same purpose) with the buyer need to go through
arbitration?
A: Yes. There are factors, which taken together, can outweigh the
exclusive buyer broker contract.
Q: 5. Are these guidelines a "predetermination
of entitlement" to a commission, which is prohibited under
NAR policy?
A: No. The guidelines are merely factors to be considered in light
of built-in presumptions.
Q: 6. Where can additional information
regarding the topics discussed in this memorandum be obtained?
A: This memorandum is one of the many Legal Briefs, Legal Q&As,
and other free legal publications made available to REALTORS® by
C.A.R. These publications are available at many local Associations/Boards
of REALTORS®, and are automatically distributed to subscribers of
PreventionExpress™, C.A.R.’s suite of products and services designed
to help REALTORS® stay abreast of legal developments affecting the
real estate industry. For information on PreventionExpress™, contact
Real Estate Business Services, Inc., a C.A.R. subsidiary, at 213.739.8227.
In addition, many C.A.R. publications are available through C.A.R.’s
website at or CARFAX, C.A.R.’s fax-on-demand
system. To access CARFAX, call 213.739.8329 and request the CARFAX
catalogue.
For free recorded messages on more than 200 real estate-related
topics, C.A.R. members can call C.A.R.’s Automated Legal Information
System, or ALIS®, 24 hours a day. To access ALIS®, simply call 213.739.8205
from a touch-tone phone and follow the prompts.
Readers who require specific advice should review their facts
with an attorney. C.A.R. members requiring legal assistance may
contact C.A.R.'s Member Legal Hotline at 213.739.8282, Monday through
Friday, 9:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. C.A.R. members who are broker-owners,
office managers, Designated REALTORS® or PreventionExpress™ subscribers
may contact the Member Legal Hotline at 213.739.8350 to receive
expedited service. Members may also fax or e-mail their questions
to the Member Legal Hotline at 213.480.7724 or legal_hotline@car.org.
Written correspondence should be addressed to:
California Association of REALTORS®
Member Legal Services
525 South Virgil Avenue
Los Angeles, California 90020
The information contained
herein is believed accurate as of October 20, 2001. It is intended
to provide general answers to general questions and is not intended
as a substitute for individual legal advice. Advice in specific
situations may differ depending upon a wide variety of factors.
Therefore, readers with specific legal questions should seek the
advice of an attorney.