Here are nine tips to bear
in mind when you sell in a marital war zone:
1. Be sure you have both sellers’ authority if they’re
co-owners. From the get-go, check the title and deed so you know
whose name or names belong on the listing agreement so the sale
is legal, says Barry Schatz, a Chicago matrimonial lawyer with the
firm Kalcheim, Schatz & Berger. Your state may also have laws
that give a spouse a legal interest in a marital property, even
if their name isn’t on the deed or title.
2. Offer advice that keeps you neutral. Even though you didn’t
sign up to be a marriage counselor, you may occasionally have to
assume that role. “One side is usually easier to deal with
than the other, but you have to walk a tightrope,” says Honore
Frumentino, CRS®, a broker-associate with Koenig & Strey
GMAC, in Deerfield, Ill.
3. Hear their individual objectives but get them to agree to one
agenda. Divorcing couples have several options: sell and divide
the proceeds according to the divorce decree; agree that one spouse
will buy out the other; or share ownership until some future time
even though only one may live in the home, says Leona Orphanos,
with RE/MAX Real Estate Center in Foxboro, Mass. You may have to
discuss the possibilities with each side separately. Encourage compromise.
“Stress that the more cooperative they are, the more likely
you can maximize profits,” Frumentino says.
4. Get them up to speed on tax law changes. Make sure divorcing
sellers know about the tax rules, enacted in 1997, governing the
sale of a principal residence. These rules provide much more flexibility
for sellers than prior law. Under the new rules, “if the couple’s
house has been a primary residence for both of them for two of the
last five years, each automatically receives a $250,000 exclusion,”
says Anju D. Jessani, a divorce and family mediator in Hoboken,
N.J. “If one of them hasn’t resided in the house for
that period, yet the divorce decree specifies that the other be
allowed to remain in the house, the nonresident is also allowed
the exclusion.”
More important, sellers are no longer required to purchase a home
of the same or greater value. The provision can be used for sales
as often as every two years, and there are no longer age requirements
that limit eligibility for excluding gains from tax.
Be sure you recommend that your sellers have their attorneys and
a tax adviser explain these rules.
5. Add contingencies. Leave nothing to chance to avoid “he
said, she said” disagreements. For example, you could suggest
a provision in the listing agreement that if an offer is made within
a certain percentage of the listing price it must be accepted, Schatz
says. This keeps the couple from arguing over a small dollar amount
and losing the offer.
6. Keep mum. Avoid talking about why the house is listed. “You
don’t want buyers to think it’s a fire sale,”
says Frumentino.
7. Keep clients busy—and apart. Ask one to take charge of
gathering warranties; the other to list competent service providers
they’ve used.
8. Bring in the sellers’ divorce lawyers only when necessary.
When the sides really can’t agree, call in their attorneys,
but beware. Edward A. Hester, with Dream Town Realty Inc. in Chicago,
had sellers who each brought in a divorce and a personal lawyer.
“There were seven of us plus the buyers. The buyers were disgusted
and finally said, ‘If this doesn’t close, I’m
walking away.’ The deal got done, but everyone left miserable,”
Hester says.
9. Handhold ’til the end. To keep the deal from cratering,
Frumentino often segregates sellers at the closing. The husband
and his attorney are in one room and the wife and her attorney are
in another. Both are separate from the buyers. “If you’ve
got two people looking like they’re at a funeral, it’ll
dampen the buyers’ moment,” she says.
The silver lining to all this, Frumentino adds, is that most divorced
sellers adjust their priorities, and find happiness and a new home.
REALTOR® Magazine Online
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