English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

If my ex agrees to the buy out, am I obligated to pay the realtors commision even though I am buying the house, or is there a way to cancel the realtors contract?

2006-10-10 19:10:39 · 8 answers · asked by californiarad 2 in Family & Relationships Marriage & Divorce

8 answers

Probably, you may need to settle the matter with your ex in regards to the division of property and assets.

2006-10-10 19:22:35 · answer #1 · answered by Keanu 4 · 0 0

Not a problem. Tell the realtor that you want to cancell the listing. If he/she refuses, just wait out the term of the contract and go ahead with your business. There might be a short waiting period after the contract expires, but it's worth the wait

2006-10-10 19:18:20 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Why does your Realtor need to know you gave your ex some money? Make a contract with your ex for the buyout so she can't come back later with a new claim and don't sell your house until the contract expires. Or you can take it off the market.

2006-10-10 19:16:32 · answer #3 · answered by viperwcf 1 · 0 0

You should be able to cancel by just writing in.

The realtor does not provide any value if you are buying out from your ex.

To be sure, read the fine prints in the contract.

2006-10-10 22:08:44 · answer #4 · answered by tanyongheng 2 · 0 0

If I understand you, you're currently in the home. Why the realtors? Weren't they taken care of at the time of purchase? If you signed the contract, you may be obligated. But that's with 2 signatures. If you have to negotiate a new contract with only your signature, you might negotiate better terms, or none at all.

2006-10-10 19:14:26 · answer #5 · answered by Arnold M 4 · 0 0

customarily trust the 1st answer with a pair additions a million) it definitely relies upon on the settlement you signed. devoid of get admission to to the finished text textile, no person can propose you. There are a minimum of four important varieties of the itemizing settlement here in California, not counting all the corporation specific non-generic ones that agencies use by way of fact every physique can comprehend those that come from California association of Realtors. awareness of your state's specific rules could additionally be mandatory and you do not state which. 2) whether you're obligated, the corporation could p.c. to launch you in case you clarify what's happening. that's undesirable corporation to sue for a fee the place there's no consummated transaction. it might take some thing like outright sabotage of my paintings before i could even evaluate it.

2016-10-16 01:42:29 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No you are not, feel free to email me, hell I will give you my phone number if you want too. There is no sale...its just a deed transfer and the realtor knew going into it that that was a possibility. I am in Ca too and did this two years ago after the court ordered I list the house for sale and secure an offer to get the true value of the home. I had first right of refusal, he had no rights but after the offer came in it netted me more cash to allow him to buy me out. The thing is you want to wait until you get an offer to know the TRUE value, thats what the judge recommended in my case and it made sense....appraisors can be bought off but an offer is what a third party feels it is worth. I had ten days after the offer came in to either accept the offer of open an escrow account to buy him out......I chose to buy another house and allowed him to buy me out......

2006-10-10 19:20:13 · answer #7 · answered by WitchTwo 6 · 0 0

Realtors contract only runs for certain amount of time. Wait it out and don't renew. Read your contract to see if you can pull out of it.

Work with a lawyer to buy your husband. Don't screw with the relater.

2006-10-10 23:54:59 · answer #8 · answered by Mit 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers