Brokers and agents do not currently have to disclose their knowledge of any tax consequences of a real estate transaction to their principal client, even if they are aware of the repercussions; repercussions which exist in every real estate sale. This legislation would mandate the disclosure to a client of known tax aspects of a transaction in an effort to combat the wide-spread phenomenon of the “dumb agent” — the agent who, despite his knowledge, is legally allowed to remain silent about consequences known to him in a transaction. A preprinted, boilerplate advisory to see another professional if you have concerns about the tax aspects of a transaction does not disclose the agent’s knowledge, which if disclosed might affect the client’s decisions – and thus is a material fact deceitfully omitted.
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is the production staff comprised of legal editor Fred Crane, writer-editors Connor P. Wallmark, Amy Platero, Robin Jennings, Branden Ekas, consulting instructor Summer Goralik, graphic designer Mary LaRochelle, video instructor Bill Mansfield and video editors John Rojas, Quinn Stevenson and Jose Melendez Avila.
This should have been a requirement a long time ago. The problem still remains however, that the knowledge not being disclosed by the agent, is in fact, most of time inaccurate.
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