Understanding
Agency
Reprinted from REALTOR ® Magazine
Online by permission of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS ®
Copyright 2004. All rights reserved. www.REALTOR.org/realtormag
It’s important to understand what legal
responsibilities your real estate salesperson has to you and to
other parties in the transactions. Ask your salesperson to explain
what type of agency relationship you have with him or her and with
the brokerage company.
- Seller's representative (also known as a listing agent
or seller's agent). A seller's agent is hired by and
represents the seller. All fiduciary duties are owed to the seller.
The agency relationship usually is created by a listing contract.
- Subagent. A subagent owes the same fiduciary
duties to the agent's principal as the agent does. Subagency usually
arises when a cooperating sales associate from another brokerage,
who is not representing the buyer as a buyer’s representative
or operating in a nonagency
relationship, shows property to a buyer. In such a case, the subagent
works with the buyer as a customer but owes fiduciary duties to
the listing broker and the seller. Although a subagent cannot
assist the buyer in any way that would be detrimental to the seller,
a buyer-customer can expect to be treated honestly by the subagent.
It is important that subagents fully explain their duties to buyers.
- Buyer's representative (also known as a buyer’s
agent). A real estate licensee who is hired by prospective
buyers to represent them in a real estate transaction. The buyer's
rep works in the buyer's best interest throughout the transaction
and owes fiduciary duties to the buyer. The buyer can pay the
licensee directly through a negotiated fee, or the buyer's rep
may be paid by the seller or by a commission split with the listing
broker.
- Disclosed dual agent. Dual agency is a relationship
in which the brokerage firm represents both the buyer and the
seller in the same real estate transaction. Dual agency relationships
do not carry with them all of the traditional fiduciary duties
to the clients. Instead, dual agents owe limited fiduciary duties.
Because of the potential for conflicts of interest in a dual-agency
relationship, it's vital that all parties give their informed
consent. In many states, this consent must be in writing. Disclosed
dual agency, in which both the buyer and the seller are told that
the agent is representing both of them, is legal in most states.
- Designated agent (also called, among other things,
appointed agency). This is a brokerage practice that
allows the managing broker to designate which licensees in the
brokerage will act as an agent of the seller and which will act
as an agent of the buyer. Designated agency avoids the problem
of creating a dual-agency relationship for licensees at the brokerage.
The designated agents give their clients full representation,
with all of the attendant fiduciary duties. The broker still has
the responsibility of supervising both groups of licensees.
- Nonagency relationship (called, among other things,
a transaction broker or facilitator). Some states permit
a real estate licensee to have a type of nonagency relationship
with a consumer. These relationships vary considerably from state
to state, both as to the duties owed to the consumer and the name
used to describe them. Very generally, the duties owed to the
consumer in a nonagency relationship are less than the complete,
traditional fiduciary duties of an agency relationship.
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