The Offer to Purchase–It behooves realtor’s to spend extra time on this important document

15 12 2009

In Massachusetts, where I practice as a real estate attorney, there is a two step process for most real estate purchases. Usually without the assistance of counsel, the parties enter into an Offer to Purchase (the “OTP”). There are some contingencies in the OTP, which generally center around a “satisfactory” inspection. If the property “passes” inspection, the next step is to enter into a Purchase and Sale Agreement (the “PNS”) which has more provisions than the OTP, and “fleshes out” the details of the transaction in greater depth. What every real estate professional in Massachusetts needs to take note of, however, is that there are Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court decisions, which clearly hold that the OTP, if it includes the basic facts of the transaction (like purchase price, closing date and the like), can be viewed as an enforceable contract, upon which the Buyer can sue the Seller for specific performance, even if the parties are never able to work out a mutually satisfactory PNS.
That being the case, I thought I would make some observations about what I am seeing in many OTP’s which can, and should be, improved by the realtors who generally draw the documents up.
1. Make Sure the OTP is legible. This may sound like a basic truism on a document as important as the OTP, but I am amazed at how many times, I receive OTP’s to review, where I cannot read some of the important terms therein, because of strike-overs or substitutions in the margins. The OTP should really be written very neatly, and precisely, because it is from this document that an accurate PNS can be drafted by the attorneys representing the Buyer and Seller.
2. Think Long and Hard About Who Will Hold the PNS Deposit. If you are a Buyer’s agent, and would like to get paid at the closing, you are almost always better off having the attorney for the Seller hold the deposit(s). The Listing Broker holding the deposit often takes his or her time to pay you your fee. Then, you have that ugly possibility that the Listing Broker may experience some kind of financial difficulties which delay (or prevent) your getting paid. I would opt for the attorney, who is subject to strict disciplinary rules if the deposit does not get delivered and who should be willing to pay over the deposit(s) at the closing for distribution by the closing agent.
3. Be Precise in Indicating What is “Included” and Excluded” from the Sale. The OTP is the place to be specific in this area. Many disputes at the PNS level can be avoided if there is definition of the inclusions and exclusions.
4. Be Realstic in Terms of Date for Mortgage Commitment and Submission. I have seen many OTP’s where the date to submit the mortgage application has passed by the time I start working on the PNS. Make the dates comport with reality. Similarly, put in a realistic time frame for the receipt of a mortgage commitment. Lenders are understaffed, and appraisals are taking longer than in the past. Give all parties a chance to do what is possible.
As I said above, the OTP is basically completed by the realtors. If you are involved, take the time to make your OTP accurate and realistic. It will make your transactions move more smoothly, and the extra time spent at the outset of the transaction will almost always bear fruit somewhere down the line.

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2 responses

29 01 2010
hannah

Hello,
A friend of mine was going to buy a house. Nobody held her money. She was supposed to bring it the day of the closing.
It turned out that the terms of the loan were not what had been discussed at the bank. She declined the loan and was subsequently threatened with a specific performance suit.
She was told she had a standard contract. When she investigated on her own she found that standard contracts for each state either had a contingency for disagreeing with the terms of the loan or a place for the agent to write that in.
When she mentioned this to the lawyer, realtors, and bank there was an additional attempt to coerce her to sign when she recieved paperwork indicating a suit had been filed when no suit had been filed.
The house was sold to a different buyer under semi-secret terms seven days later for approximately five thousand dollars less.
My friend had asked for an extension to find alternate financing and it was not granted.
After the house was sold she got a letter or two indicating the seller was suing her for the difference in the prices.
The letters were stamped in red “filed” and indicated they had gone to a court, but when the courts were checked no suits had been filed.
What do you make of this?

22 04 2010
realtorsresource

Hannah–Give me a call at 617-596-3184 anytime. My goal is to help people with problems like your friends.

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