·
License
law requires all offers to be forwarded by a licensee to seller. After
the offers are delivered the seller may consider them in any order he or she
desires.
·
The
buyer's agent is generally prohibited from contacting the seller who is represented by another agent.
·
There
is no requirement that a seller must reject an offer in writing or even
acknowledge receipt of the offer. A seller can accept, reject or counter an
offer. Or the seller can choose to do nothing, or sit and wait for a second
offer.
·
A buyer
can request that a seller respond in writing but the seller has no legal
obligation to do so.
·
There
is no requirement on multiple offers that a seller treat each potential buyer
equally or fairly (except for the protected categories under the Fair Housing
Act which are race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or
national origin).
·
Any
material change to a counteroffer is a rejection and becomes a counteroffer
back to the other party (true for all offers-not just multiple offer
situations).
·
A
seller is not required to take the highest offer, but could actually take a lower offer based
on terms or cash.
·
The
seller can disclose the amount of the offers to none, some or all of the other
potential buyers.
·
A
seller can offer one buyer an opportunity to submit another bid, without offering the other buyers a similar
opportunity.
·
An
offer cannot be accepted orally. You do not have a binding contract until the
written acceptance is delivered to you (or your agent).
·
An
offer or counteroffer can be revoked at any time before it is accepted (even if it contains an expiration date).
·
An
offer can be revoked orally.
·
A
seller is not required to accept a full price and terms offer.
image courtesy of scottchan/freedigitalphotos.net
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