Estate agency best practice: Q&A

From December 2005 to March 2006, EAA issued four circulars to provide guidelines to practitioners on estate agency practice. The following questions and answers are a summary of the circulars. Practitioners can download the full text of the circulars via EAA's website (www.eaa.org.hk ).

Q:
When accepting an appointment of agency, is it proper for a practitioner to accept a declaration produced by a son claiming to be the authorised representative of the vendor - his father - to sell the property in the absence of the vendor?
 
A:
It is imperative that before the practitioner accepts any appointment of agency and/or deals with any person claiming to be the authorised representative of the absent contracting party in a property transaction, the representative must be able to produce a Power of Attorney duly executed by the absent contracting party authorising the representative to enter into the transaction concerned and to execute the relevant document for and on his behalf. To avoid unnecessary disputes, EAA strongly recommends the Power of Attorney be executed and attested by a solicitor. It is insufficient and highly risky simply to request the representative to sign a declaration to the effect that he has or will have proper authorisation from the absent contracting party and that he will be personally responsible for all consequences.
 
Q:
Should a practitioner arrange for his/her client to sign a Provisional Agreement for Sale and Purchase (PASP) when it is outside the service hours for conducting a land search and no land search has been conducted?
 
A:
It is necessary for practitioners, when acting as an agent, to carry out a land search of the property so as to ascertain the ownership of the property and any existing encumbrances affecting it. The Estate Agents Ordinance and the Estate Agents Practice (General Duties and Hong Kong Residential Properties) Regulation stipulate that a licensee must conduct and/or supply a land search to his client. In February 2005, the Land Registry introduced the Integrated Registration Information System, through which the public may conduct land searches on the internet from 8:30am to 11:30pm every day. Stating that no land search could be carried out because the PASP was signed outside the service hours for conducting a land search is unacceptable.
 
Q:
In arranging for a sale and purchase of shares in a property holding company, what should a practitioner note in particular?
 
A:
An agreement for the sale and purchase of shares is a complicated legal document. Purchaser(s) may unwittingly take over debts and liabilities of a limited company that are associated with a transfer of the shares and business undertakings of that limited company, and such debts and liabilities may not be easily discovered without conducting a due diligence examination of the accounts and business of that limited company. In the event that the purchaser(s) require(s) financing to complete the purchase, a share transfer may give rise to complications in the financing of the purchase. If the parties' interests are to be adequately protected, comprehensive legal documentation is required. It is highly risky and inappropriate for practitioners to arrange for a share transfer without legal advice.
 
Q:
It is current conveyancing practice that upon the signing of a PASP, an initial deposit is paid directly to the vendor. What is the duty of a practitioner when there is an undischarged mortgage?
 
A:
The practitioner should advise the purchaser of any possible risks in payment of deposits directly to the vendor and of the desirability of arranging for the stakeholding of all deposits (both the initial and further deposits) by a firm of solicitors. The licensee should also explain to the vendor and the purchaser the implications of the stakeholding arrangement and the conditions to be fulfilled before the release of the deposits by stakeholders. These obligations apply to all sales and purchases whenever there is an undischarged mortgage. A licensee must explain to a client who is not legally represented, before entering into a PASP of a property where there is an undischarged mortgage, the meaning of any deposit stakeholding provision and/or the implications and risks of deleting the deposit stakeholding provision contained in a pre-printed PASP.


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