The following is written by Paragon Title’s Dick Fritz. He is very good at what he does and he sent this out to me today so I could share it with my agents. I pass it along to you…

We have just been informed by the Montgomery County Transfer Office that they have decided to change their method of calculating transfer and recordation taxes on certain short sale transactions. This does not apply to all short sale transactions — only to those transactions in which the seller is lucky enough to get their lender to agree to waive the deficiency and let them walk away from the property without owing anything. For those situations where the lender does not waive the deficiency and is going to pursue the seller after settlement for the balance of money owed, it is business as usual and the transfer and recordation taxes will be calculated on the sales price in the contract. What is the same and what is different is summarized below:

SCENARIO 1: Short Sale — Seller’s lender is NOT waiving the deficiency and will pursue Seller after settlement for balance owed on the loan

RESULT 1: NO CHANGE — Transfer and Recordation Taxes are calculated on the contract sales price

SCENARIO 2: Short Sale — Seller’s Lender IS waiving the deficiency and Seller will owe nothing after settlement — loan is marked as paid for less than owed

RESULT 2: NEW CALCULATION — Transfer and Recordation Taxes are calculated on the contract sales price PLUS the difference between the contract sales price and the balance the seller owes on his loan

Consider the following examples:

EXAMPLE 1:

Contract Sales Price: $200,000.00

Balance owed on Loan: $300,000.00 ($100,000.00 deficiency)

Seller’s Lender Action: Lender will pursue the Seller for the $100,000.00 owed after settlement

Transfer Taxes: Calculated on Contract Sales Price of $200,000.00; the $100,000.00 deficiency is not taxable because it is not waived

EXAMPLE 2:

Contract Sales Price: $200,000.00

Balance owed on Loan: $300,000.00 ($100,000.00 deficiency)

Seller’s Lender Action: Lender will waive the deficiency; Seller owes nothing after settlement

Transfer Taxes: Calculated on Contract Sales Price of $200,000.00 PLUS deficiency of $100,000.00 = Transfer Taxes due on $300,000.00

EXAMPLE 3:

Contract Sales Price: $200,000.00

Balance owed on Loan: $225,000.00 on first loan ($25,000.00 deficiency) and $75,000.00 on second loan ($75,000.00 deficiency)

Seller’s Lender Action: First Lender will waive deficiency on first loan; Second Lender will pursue Seller for the $75,000.00 on second loan

Transfer Taxes: Calculated on Contract Sales Price of $200,000.00 PLUS the $25,000.00 waived on First Loan = Transfer Taxes due on $225,000.00; the $75,000.00 deficiency on the Second Loan is not taxable because the Second Lender will go after the Seller for the $75,000.00 after settlement.

Obviously this has great significance when putting together sales contracts and negotiating short sales. We make the following recommendations:

1. From the Buyer’s and Selling Agent’s Perspective — Negotiating the Sales Contract

Clearly, the Buyer is entering the transaction expecting to pay transfer taxes on the sales price stated in the sales contract. The Buyer is not expecting the amount of transfer taxes that the Buyer is going to be paying to be dependent on something the Buyer has no control over — whether or not the Seller is successful in negotiating with the short sale lender to waive any deficiency due under the loan. However, the language in the Sales Contract does not deal with this situation. It has the Buyer and Seller negotiating on how to pay whatever transfer taxes are charged by the government in order to record the Deed, but does NOT limit it to only those transfer taxes charged on the contract sales price. Therefore, if the transaction is a short sale and the Buyer wishes to limit his liability to only those transfer taxes that are calculated on the Contract Sales Price, we suggest the following language be added to the Sales Contract:

Buyer shall be obligated to pay Buyer’s portion of the transfer and recordation taxes for recording the Deed based on the Contract Sales Price. Any transfer and recordation taxes charged by the government to record the Deed on an amount in excess of the Contract Sales Price shall be paid by Seller.

2. From the Buyer and Selling Agent’s Perspective — Applying for a New Loan

Under the new RESPA Rule, the Buyer’s Lender must provide the Buyer with a Good Faith Estimate (GFE). Under the new RESPA Rule, there are certain items on the GFE that fall into the category that they cannot be higher at settlement than listed on the GFE. Amongst the items in this category are TRANSFER TAXES. So, if the Buyer’s Lender gives them a GFE calculating the transfer taxes based upon the contract sales price and at settlement they are higher (based upon the contract sales price PLUS the deficiency), the lender has two choices: (A) pay the difference to the buyer (they certainly aren’t going to want to do that); or (B) state that there are changed circumstances (in this case the Seller’s short sale lender waiving the deficiency — which would be correct), delaying settlement, and issuing a new GFE showing the higher transfer taxes.

If, under the provisions of the sales contract, the Buyer might end up paying any portion of the transfer taxes calculated on a waived deficiency, then alert the Lender to this possibility in advance so that transfer taxes can be listed on the GFE at the higher number. Then, if the transfer taxes are lower at settlement, settlement can still proceed without a delay (it is always permissible for the Buyer’s costs to go down without having to issue a new GFE and delay settlement).

3. From the Seller’s and Listing Agent’s Perspective — Negotiating the Sales Contract and Getting the Short Sale Approved

Nothing spoils a short sale settlement faster than the short sale lender approving one set of numbers (in this case transfer taxes based upon the Contract Sales Price) and those numbers changing at the time of settlement (adding transfer taxes based upon the deficiency). This can quickly turn an approved short sale into an unapproved short sale. Bad for the seller, bad for the buyer, and now no sales commissions after all that work. Or even worse — someone else has to come up with the extra money. If the seller can’t, and the buyer won’t, then we all know where all eyes turn and this is also bad. How to protect against this:

A. MAKE SURE THE SELLING AGENT UNDERSTANDS TRANSFER TAXES MIGHT BE CALCULATED ON A NUMBER HIGHER THAN THE SALES PRICE AND NEGOTIATE IN THE SALES CONTRACT HOW THE EXTRA TAXES ARE TO BE PAID. Don’t just assume they know. If you do, you are opening yourself up to an argument later on as to who has to pay the extra money.

B. When having settlement statements prepared to send to the short sale lender for approval, have the transfer taxes calculated on the highest possible number (the principal balance the seller owes on the loan(s) rather than the contract sales price), and have the transfer taxes divided up between the Buyer and Seller on the HUD1 as you negotiated them in 2.A. above. If the short sale lender approves a HUD1 with higher transfer taxes and the lender getting less money, and it turns out at settlement that the transfer taxes are lower and the short sale lender gets more money, the lender will approve the HUD1 and it can settle.

C. IF THE LENDER IS GOING TO PURSUE THE SELLER FOR THE DEFICIENCY AFTER SETTLEMENT, MAKE SURE THE SHORT SALE APPROVAL LETTER SAYS THE LENDER IS GOING TO DO THIS. Montgomery County has indicated that they are going to PRESUME that the deficiency is waived (and is thus taxable) UNLESS written evidence is presented to them that the deficiency is not waived. Thus, if the short sale lender is going to go after the Seller for the balance of the money after settlement, make sure the short sale approval letter says they are going to do this. Otherwise, Montgomery County will tax the extra amount.

This is just a short (or maybe not so short) discussion of this issue. We will also address this at various sales meetings, but since Montgomery County made their official pronouncement today in the form of a bulletin, we thought it important that all of you be notified immediately.


HUD amends several regulations as part of RESPA

On January 5, 2010, in Dynamic Marketing, by Darrin Friedman

HUD LOGO.indd

HUD has amended several regulations as part of the Real Estate Settlement and Procedure Act (RESPA). Essentially, HUD is requiring more timely and effective disclosures related to mortgage settlement costs. The changes are designed to protect consumers from unnecessarily high settlement costs and to make it easier for consumers to compare loans.

On January 1, 2010, all lenders are required to use a new standardized Good Faith Estimate (GFE) form for all loan applications. Additionally, closing agents must use a new HUD-1 Settlement Statement when the new GFE is used.

As these revisions impact the way your buyers proceed through the home loan process, it is important that you be aware of the changes. Fortunately, our partners at Coldwell Banker Home Loans are fully committed to providing you with the information you need to be fully informed in this transition. They are well versed in all elements of the new GFE and HUD-1 Settlement Statement and are fully prepared to answer your questions and lead you through the transition.

Chevy Chase, Washington DC – Restaurant of the Week

On November 23, 2009, in Dynamic Marketing, by Darrin Friedman

I’m one of those typical Real Estate professionals who eats out like EVERY single day. I know, it’s horrible. I’m ashamed of myself! But, when you work in a place like Chevy Chase, Washington DC there is so much variety one can get a little greedy with choice.

In any event, if you find yourself in this part of DC, and you want a good meal at a very reasonable expense, you MUST go to 49 Twelve Thai Cuisine.

Now here is my disclaimer – I go there ALL the time. Why? The food is really fresh, fast, and the bill is usually less than what I would have gotten at Quiznos.

What I get: The chili chicken and basil
Cost: Under $7.99 Lunch Special
Service: Tony is the son’s owner, and he is AMAZING. His customer care should be taught in my office!

So, there you go, my first restaurant review.

To reach them just hit the link below:

http://www.merchantcircle.com/business/49.Twelve.Thai.Cuisine.202-966-4696

Have Fun!


Dateline Washington DC
by Darrin Friedman

If you are a Real Estate agent in Washington DC You MUST read this…Last week the Greater Capital Association of Realtors made several changes to vital forms for the Washington DC and Maryland area sales contracts. Though I do not profess to be an attorney in any way, and I recommend that if you have any questions that you call Randy Rothstein at Paragon Title (301-986-1114), I did want to give you the highlights so you would be aware of the changes.

Again, these forms are now on “the street” in the Washington DC Real Estate market, and if you are not using them, you will be exposing yourself to the ugliness.

OK, now that I have said all that, here are the forms that have been modified:

1) The Listing Agreement
2) The Washington DC Jurisdictional Disclosure and Addendum
3) Tenancy Addendum
4) Conservation Addendum
5) Extension of Home-buyer credits (first time and beyond)

Today, I’m going to JUST focus on the listing agreement. The other forms will come soon. Now the details:


The Listing Agreement
PAGE 1:

Change 1: The first change is in Paragraph 2 – the words”MRIS Broker Code” replaced “MRIS ID”

Change 2: The purpose of Storage spaces and parking spaces is fleshed out along with asking the owner to specifically check the use

Page 2:

Change 1: In paragraph 6 Section A the language now addresses the additional broker fee (formerly known as the admin fee) and how that is paid. It is much clearer.

Page 3:

Change 1: Access!
Paragraph B as illustrated below focuses on access. It’s pretty self-explanitory, but this is NEW language and every Washington DC Real Estate agent and broker should read it.

Change 2: Virtual Marketing
Now, this clause is now included in the listing agreement instead of being a separate form. This is a VERY good thing considering it used to be a whole extra form. Yeah saving the earth! LOL!

Page 4:

Paragraph 14 now has better language…check out below!

For the rest of the changes, just email me at dfriedman@cbmove.com and I will you send you the pdf.

Have a great weekend!


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