| History
Until 1994, all brokers in Colorado were
deemed to be either the agent (or sub-agent,
if working with the buyer) of the seller. For
lots of legal reasons, this exposed both sellers
and brokers to unreasonable liability, while
providing that the buyer would not be represented
in the transaction.
In 1994, Colorado created alternative working
relationships for the public in working with
real estate brokers. These include seller's
agent (advocating for the seller), buyer's agent
(advocating for the buyer), dual agent (advocates
equally for buyer and seller) and transaction-broker
(a neutral facilitator who advocates for neither
party).
Starting in 2003, the State eliminated dual-agency
and sub-agency as allowable working relationships.
Today, if a broker has a working relationship
with the public, he/she is either the agent
or transaction broker. The working relationship
is established with the individual real estate
broker, not with the company. The company, however,
is still responsible for supervision of its
brokers to ensure a proper transaction.
At
Leonard Leonard & Associates, an individual
broker may offer the following working relationships:
Seller's
Agent
A seller's agent works solely on behalf of the
seller and owes duties to the seller which include
the utmost good faith, loyalty and fidelity.
The agent will negotiate on behalf of, and act
as an advocate for the seller. The seller is
not legally responsible (vicariously liable)
for the actions of the agent when that agent
is acting within the scope of the agency, unless
the agent is acting on the seller's instructions,
or if the seller knows of the action and fails
to repudiate it (ratification).
The agent must disclose to potential buyers
or tenants all adverse material facts about
the property actually known by the broker. A
separate written listing agreement is required
by State law which sets forth the duties and
obligations of the parties.
Buyer's
Agent
A buyer's agent works solely on behalf of the
buyer and owes duties to the buyer which include
the utmost good faith, loyalty and fidelity.
The agent will negotiate on behalf of and act
as an advocate for the buyer. The buyer is not
legally responsible (vicariously liable) for
the actions of the agent when that agent is
acting within the scope of the agency, unless
the agent is acting on the buyer's instructions,
or if the buyer knows of the action and fails
to repudiate it (ratification).
The agent must disclose to potential sellers
all adverse material facts concerning the buyer's
financial ability to perform the terms of the
transaction and whether the buyer intends to
occupy the property. A separate written buyer
listing agreement is required by State law which
sets forth the duties and obligations of the
parties.
Transaction
Broker
A transaction-broker assists the buyer or seller
(or both) throughout a real estate transaction
with communication, advice, negotiation, contracting
and closing without being an agent or advocate
for any of the parties. The parties to a transaction
are not legally responsible (vicariously liable)
for the actions of a transaction-broker, and
a transaction-broker does not owe those parties
the fiduciary duties of an agent. However, a
transaction broker does owe the parties a number
of statutory obligations and responsibilities,
including honesty and using reasonable skill
and care in the performance of any oral or written
agreement. A transaction-broker must also make
the same disclosures as agents about adverse
material facts concerning a property or a buyer's
financial ability to perform the terms of a
transaction and whether the buyer intends to
occupy the property, if pertinent to loan approval.
No written agreement is required, although one
is available.
Note 1: For purposes of these
Definitions, buyer also means "tenant"
and seller also means "landlord".
Note 2: The concept of vicarious
liability, present in agency relationships,
provides that the Principal is legally responsible
for the acts and omissions of his Agent when
acting within the scope of the agency relationship.
For example, if an Agent misrepresents something,
the seller or buyer (whichever is the Principal)
could be held liable to the other party for
that misrepresentation. This is one reason why
you want a good agent, if you choose an agency
relationship, rather than the transaction-broker
relationship. Colorado law has limited the vicarious
liability of the public to those instances where
the agent is acting on the instructions of the
Principal, or where the Principal knows of the
agent's acts and does nothing about it (ratifies
the agent's acts by inaction).
Which
Relationship Should You Pick?
Leonard Leonard & Associates recommend that
buyers choose a short-term (30-45 days) exclusive
working relationship (either agency or transaction-broker)
with our brokers. A ready buyer will locate
a suitable property quickly (1-2 weeks), and
the transaction is typically closed in 30-45
days. When seeking a specialty property, a longer
relationship may be appropriate. The broker's
fee should be negotiated at the time of the
listing.
To ensure the best chance of success in selling
sellers' properties, we only work with sellers
under an exclusive working relationship (either
agency or transaction-broker), as this is required
in order to place the seller's property into
the various computer/internet databases that
will expose it to the world.
The length of the listing should reflect the
average length of time similar properties are
taking to sell, plus a few weeks. Typical time
frames are 60-90 days for homes and 90-180 days
for land. Commercial, commercial land and farm
& ranch properties typically list for one
year, as they often require more time to sell.
The broker's fee should be negotiated at the
time of the listing. Because the working relationship
is established with the individual broker and
not the company, one Leonard Leonard broker
can represent the seller and another the buyer
without conflict. In the event that one individual
Leonard Leonard broker works with both the buyer
and the seller in the same transaction, that
broker will act as a neutral transaction-broker
for both, regardless of the relationships in
existence with each prior to that transaction.
This is spelled out in the listing agreement.
This may all sound confusing, and we would
be pleased to spend more time explaining it
if you wish. It is important to us that our
clients understand working relationships, and
are comfortable with our policies.
Regardless of which relationship you
choose, we will do our best to provide you with
the quality of service you expect.
Agency
Explained
Agency, Agent, and Fiduciary
Agent
The person hired by a principal to act for and
in behalf of, or to represent the principal,
and always acting in the principal's best interest.
Agency
A relationship between two parties wherein the
principal hires another person to represent
him or her.
Fiduciary
The word which describes the responsibility
of an agent toward the principal, involving
trust, loyalty, confidence, care and diligence.
In Colorado, it is against the law to receive
compensation for a Real Estate transaction unless
it is in writing.
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