Lately, I've run into two servicers asking for Sellers or Buyers to pay them a Short Sale processing fee, management fee or whatever they choose to call it. A 1% fee seems to be the magical number. Is anyone else seeing an increase in this? It doesn't seem legal...do you know?
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I have been dealing with this a lot lately. I have 8 offices and 400 agents so I see alot of issues in a weeks time. Here are the issues with the "processing fee" charged by agents.
1. The fees are often being hidden and misrepresented to the short sale lender. I have seen them rolled into buyer closing cost and then presented to the short sale lender as if the buyer must have this concession to get their loan when in fact they are not a buyer closing cost as defined by law.
2. There are "outside agreements" being drawn up to collect the fees that the buyer, seller and brokers are asked to sign. This is probably the biggest issue of all. The HUD 1 clearly states that there are no outside agreements and in most short sale transactions the standard forms such as the "arms length transaction" form will have a paragraph that ALL parties attest to the fact that there are no outside agreements.
3. The listing agents are not being honest with the short sale lender as to who this fee is getting paid to in many cases. In the last 2 weeks, I have dug deep enough on contracts to find that it was being paid to the listing agent, another agent in the office or a relative. That is fraud. When asked why, the agent would say "well the short sale lender won't pay us".
It's quite clear if you have to hide a fee, change the name or make a side agreement, there is fraud involved and in today's lending environment to sign the typical short sale papers provided by the short sale lender that say NO side agreements exist is just wrong, not to mention the penalities that go with it including prison!
If an agent wants to charge it, then charge it to the short sale lender or the buyer IN the contract of sale- not in outside agreement. Call it what is really is a fee for processing the short sale. If the lender approves, then there are no issues with misrepresentation nor are there issues with side agreements.
I think we all need to look at what we are signing carefully as listing/selling agents and insure that those documents are true and correct.
On the outside agreements I have seen this week, the "processor" (who was also the listing agent) had the buyer and seller agree that the services were being provided to represent both clients interest. In Texas, that is a huge issue with agency and a blatant attempt to meet the RESPA standard for services rendered.
This week our state licensing agency said it was wrong, our company attorney said it was wrong and the state licensing company said we need to report to the Texas Attorney General.
Lori
Lynn Pineda said:
Emily S. Knell said:
Emily S. Knell said:
Emily S. Knell said:
Emily S. Knell said: