Paperless transaction management system (PTM) provider PDFfiller responds to copyright infringement claims by the California Association of Realtors® (CAR) by countering with antitrust allegations — a familiar and widely recognized charge against the trade union’s domineering behavior.
For background on the case, see Parts One and Two of this article series: CAR sues document management program $136 million for unauthorized form use — and threatens CAR members as next and zipLogix puppetry and CAR’s disguised ownership.
CAR v. PDFfiller: a battle for an open market
The California Association of Realtors® (CAR) is once again presented with antitrust allegations in the wake of its lawsuit against paperless transaction management system (PTM) provider PDFfiller for copyright and trademark infringement upon its proprietary real estate forms.
Like few CAR adversaries before it, PDFfiller refused to succumb quietly to CAR’s complaint à la dotloop.
Instead, the company fought back. PDFfiller recently denied all allegations of copyright and trademark infringement and returned with a counterclaim against CAR and a third-party complaint against CAR subsidiary Real Estate Business Services, Inc. (REBS). In its response, PDFfiller accuses the behemoth trade union and its affiliates of unlawful antitrust violations by strangling the open accessibility of real estate forms throughout California.
PDFfiller’s antitrust allegations include:
- monopolization (attempted and actual);
- unlawful tying of CAR real estate forms to zipForm® software;
- conspiracy in restraint of trade; and
- violation of the Cartwright Act and the Sherman Antitrust Act.
Although this is not the first antitrust allegation lobbed against CAR, PDFfiller’s brave counterstrike touches upon some previously unaddressed (legally, at least) patterns by the trade union and its vast network of subsidiaries.
CAR is notoriously defensive of its forms, some of which propagate needlessly binding and detrimental provisions that don’t serve the needs of its users, such as arbitration and attorney fees provisions. Thus, while the forms software issue is the crisis du jour, it is hardly the biggest problem when it comes to CAR’s library of forms. Even if CAR forms were available through a sleek, modern platform, they’d still be CAR forms — set to benefit CAR first, members second.
But we digress.
Regardless, CAR stops at nothing to defend its forms — neither its members’ expense, nor alleged violations of federal antitrust law.
Editor’s note — Readers might detect an editorial voice throughout this article. Full disclosure: RPI (Realty Publications, Inc.) is an independent publisher of real estate forms in California competing with CAR. Continue reading for more information near the end of this article.
The need for trust-busting, explained
Antitrust laws originated in the late 1800s after the uncontrolled power of major businesses, such as U.S. Steel and Standard Oil, eliminated competition to the severe societal detriment of consumers. These businesses stifled competition then inflated prices when consumers had no other viable alternatives. This created a dynamic in which the business did not need to worry about quality production, since consumers had no other choices from whom or where to acquire goods and services. Singular powerhouse businesses like these became known as trusts.
Accordingly, as a matter of public policy, several antitrust laws were established to prevent such trusts from forming and monopolizing markets at consumers’ extraordinary expense. The first law, the Sherman Antitrust Act (Sherman Act), was passed in 1890. The Sherman Act focuses its scope upon market monopolization and price fixing which affects interstate commerce (although the antitrust violations themselves can occur within a single state). [15 United States Code §§1 et seq.]
Following the Sherman Act, the Clayton Act and the Federal Trade Commission Act were passed in 1914. The Clayton Act moderates anticompetitive business mergers, and the Federal Trade Commission Act established the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), a federal agency which investigates anticompetitive and monopolistic behavior to maintain beneficial market competition. [15 USC §§12-27; 29 USC §§52-53; 15 USC §§41-58]
Essentially, the three acts work in tandem to prevent unlawful, anticompetitive business practices which work against the interest of society at large — including our readers. By ensuring businesses in competition with one another independently set their prices and offer a variety of services and products, these antitrust laws preserve consumer choice in the open market, critical to efficient functioning of our capitalistic economic system.
State laws also help prevent unlawful business practices. The Cartwright Act cited by PDFfiller in its counterclaim prohibits restraint of trade and anticompetitive practices on the smaller scale of intrastate commerce in California. [Calif. Business and Professions Code §§16720 – 16728]
Thus, if PDFfiller’s allegations against CAR are proven by the evidence, the counterclaim will have a tremendous effect on the accessibility of real estate forms and software in California — and significant state and federal repercussions for CAR’s unruly behavior.
A tortured history of CAR’s antitrust legislation
PDFfiller’s counterclaim and third-party complaint highlight CAR’s “anticompetitive, unfair, and exclusionary conduct” toward PDFfiller and other PTM providers — and, subsequently, form publishers — in California. PDFfiller further claims CAR and REBS (and by association, zipLogix) “have participated in an unlawful scheme to monopolize the relevant market” by the above alleged actions.
An excerpt from PDFfiller’s counterclaim states:
CAR (including its wholly owned subsidiary, Counter-Defendant REBS) has, or is dangerously close to attaining monopoly power, in the market for EFRE in California. CAR has, or is dangerously close to having, the ability to unilaterally increase prices in, and exclude competition from, the market for EFRE in California.
Editor’s note — EFRE is defined in the counterclaim as “electronic fillable real estate forms.”
PDFfiller’s astute observation harkens back to several antitrust allegations made against CAR, the National Association of Realtors® (NAR), multiple listing services (MLS) and others linked to trade union dominance.
Perhaps the most relevant case was a contest between a part-time sales agent and a local Association of Realtors® (AOR). The AOR sought to forbid the part-time sales agent from accessing the local MLS since their primary business wasn’t representing principals in the sale of real estate. However, the sales agent fought back against the AOR, claiming their exclusion from the local MLS constituted anticompetitive behavior in violation of the Cartwright Act. The California Supreme Court ruled the AOR’s exclusion of the sales agent was, in fact, anticompetitive and against the reasonable antitrust interpretations of the Cartwright Act and, accordingly, the Sherman Act. [Marin County Board of Realtors® v. Palsson (1976) 16 C3rd 920]
The California Supreme Court’s ruling brought to issue the monopolistic tendencies of AORs, and by extension, their state and national counterparts. Although AORs often claim they are not in violation of antitrust laws per se and are merely protecting their business advantage, the Court’s ruling declared that reasonable inference of anticompetitive behavior constitutes a violation regardless.
A more recent case drew additional antitrust issues to the forefront of AOR dealings.
A group of local AORs operating individual MLSs organized a separate corporation in which they all were shareholders. Through this separate corporation, a county-wide MLS was established which collected information from each of the individual MLSs in a single database — not an inherent violation of antitrust rules as it provided significant benefits for consumers.
However, the individual AORs agreed upon a fixed price for consumers subscribing to individual MLS providers using the county-wide MLS. The unlawful price fixing scheme was brought to federal court by real estate agents opposed to the inflated prices of less efficient MLSs in partnership with highly productive MLSs in the conglomerate county-wide MLS. [Freeman v. San Diego Association of Realtors (9th Cir. 2003) 322 F3d 1133]
Thus, the precedent is set for PDFfiller’s allegations. Reasonable interpretation of the Cartwright Act and Sherman Act may well vindicate PDFfiller from CAR’s obtrusive and exclusionary dominance in the real estate forms and PTM market — widening consumers’ ability to choose higher quality forms and PTM services rather than settling for CAR’s.
Unlawful tying: CAR’s combinative schemes
In addition to the monopolization allegations, PDFfiller’s counterclaim also alleges the unlawful tying of previously separate products through zipForm® software.
A tying arrangement occurs when an agreement is entered into between a vendor and a purchaser in which the vendor sells a product or service to the purchaser conditioned on their purchase of a different (tied) product or service.
As stated in PDFfiller’s third-party complaint against REBS:
The unilateral refusal of CAR (including its wholly owned subsidiary, Defendant REBS) to make access to CAR EFRE available without zipForm® is unlawful exclusionary or predatory conduct and, in combination with Defendants’ agreements, constitutes monopolization or attempted monopolization of the market for PTM Software for EFRE software in California.
Thus, according to PDFfiller’s complaint, requiring agents to purchase zipForm® software in order to use CAR forms (two otherwise separate and autonomous products) constitutes an unlawful tying of products, for which the purchase and use of one is dependent on the purchase of the other.
Further, the tying occurs between two less-than-exemplary products, requiring members and subscribing non-members to access lackluster forms through outmoded software — hardly an efficient arrangement for progressive California agents and brokers.
Of course, CAR has gotten away with such reprehensible combinations (or bundling) in the past.
Prior to 2002, CAR real estate forms were sold separately from membership in the trade union and thus on equal ground with competing real estate form providers. Then, CAR incorporated its forms behind its membership paywall — deceptively labeled a “free” member benefit — severely limiting the utility of forms from other publishers for their members.
Thus, CAR’s tying activity has been displayed twice: tying real estate forms into membership, and later tying the forms themselves with the zipForm® software.
Even non-members using CAR forms have to purchase zipForm® software in addition to the $799 – $999 fee for access to CAR’s forms library. Simply, CAR’s forms simply cannot be used outside and independently of its proprietary zipForm® platform. As CAR has bullied much of California (but not the California Bureau of Real Estate (CalBRE)) into believing only CAR forms are legal to use (an absolute falsehood), the majority of California’s real estate professional population suffers the expensive effects of such product bundling — and relinquishes their ability to choose.
Fortunately for agents who aren’t required to use CAR forms by membership or the dictates of their employing member brokers, RPI (Realty Publications, Inc.) provides over 400 free, legal and quality forms — no membership, fees or software required.
Editor’s note —Though produced by the same publisher, RPI forms were previously branded as first tuesday forms.
Use of forms ought to be unrestricted and available through whichever platform the user deems most appropriate, not held for ransom behind aging cloud-based software disliked by many and prone to crash. Still more importantly than software, users ought to use the form they deem is the most beneficial to their practice, engineered consumer friendly and best to protect their fee — and CAR forms simply are not the best choice.
Economic effects and restraint of trade
CAR’s monopolistic and anticompetitive actions similarly limit the number of voices active in the market of real estate service providers and educators. PDFfiller (with others like dotloop) suffers at CAR’s hand for providing alternative PTM services to zipForm®.
Full disclosure: first tuesday, too, has suffered from CAR’s overreaching hand in the forms marketplace.
CAR’s previous bundling of real estate forms into its membership in 2002 negatively affected competing forms providers and limited the number of voices and form publishers available to compete in the marketplace. Further, to replace forms revenues lost at the AOR level, CAR increased its dues $18 – $35 — a mandatory price increase shouldered by its members.
However, after CAR’s bundling ensured CAR members had to use CAR forms, CAR agents believed the forms were “free” with their already-paid membership dues. This effectively killed the diversity that was then present in the forms market, effectively stopping CAR members from buying forms produced by any other publisher, first tuesday included. Although the positive side effect for non-member MLS agents is access to RPI’s completely free forms library, California licensees lost a great deal of choice, and therefore competitive advantage, as a direct result of CAR’s bundling.
Joining the defense of the open market
PDFfiller’s counterclaim and third-party complaint thus put PTM and forms providers on the edge of their seats. The outcome of PDFfiller’s dispute with CAR and its affiliates will reverberate throughout several subindustries to real estate in California, including real estate forms and PTMs.
Approximately 166,000 members strong, CAR is a sizeable consortium which exerts significant influence over the California real estate industry. Further, roughly 60% of active licensees are members of CAR. Thus, what CAR does (and doesn’t do) is acutely felt by everyone in real estate today.
It benefits us all to await a judgment in favor of the open market, knocking those singular, domineering players down a peg or two to increase licensee and consumer choice and balance pricing for real estate-related services.
Otherwise, as PDFfiller suggests in its defense, CAR will continue on its warpath and become a true juggernaut, flattening Sisyphus at last — to the disparate expense of all its members and non-members alike.
For years I have been bothered by the “monopoly” that local AORs and CAR have on access to the forms and MLS. I think it should be illegal/unlawful to require real estate agents to sign up for local realtor boards, then sign up for Zip Forms, then sign up for MLS access. The level of service of most realtor boards and their employees definitely does not even justify membership. Realtors have also been brainwashed into only accepting CAR forms. This is ridiculous! I’ve had to join a board just to access CAR forms and get MLS access. I hope the court
for decades i operated very successfully in California while being ONLY an MLS subscriber. the CAR offers very little to a knowledgeable practitioner. i don’t need their “brand”, their silly ad campaigns or their legal advice which i have accessed and found useless. i do use their forms and find them convenient and easy BUT they are not very client centered. i find myself carving out parts of each new iteration.
the ONLY reason i jojned the association was that they doubled the cost of the stand alone forms at which point i could join for about half the cost of not joining. to my mind that doubling alone is proof of anti-competitive behavior.
Gentleperson, sadly the number of super fine real estate agents trying to earn a living and serve their relatives, friends and prospects are in the majority of 160,000 plus agents. They are under the poor tutoring of brokerage personnel who have unfortunately succumbed to the cartel brainwashing of AOR & CAR & local realtor groups operational fundamentals – they know no difference.. First, these fine folks …simply do not know the difference between contracts – nor do they really care. These many rookie agents, by in large come and go over the years weakening the depth of reasoning due to the lack of experience, legal training and true professional ethics training i.e. single agency representation.They mostly follow – hook line and sinker the policy of the firm with which they are associated believing these policies and procedures & no contracts choice – “you must use the CAR forms” that will make you rich; really, they only desire to earn financial and lifestyle opportunity as an American Citizen in real estate brokerage.
So I just downloaded RPI’s forms–what I am not sure of–are these forms adequately legal to use and are they acceptable to the California Board of Real Estate?
Gary,
Thank you for your inquiry. Yes! All 400 RPI (Realty Publications, Inc.) forms are 100% legal for use in California and provide better protection for your fee. Click here for a short discussion about your professional use of RPI forms and how RPI forms are distinguishably better than the forms offered by other publishers.
Regards,
ft Editorial Staff
Many agents I know have grown up with CAR forms and do not know any other forms exist. Some of them cannot afford to join offices where membership to CAR and NAR are mandatory. I wonder what would happen if some other company offered similar or better services that CAR for half of the price; I believe that company could still be profitable…To the drawing board – I go?
If you are an independent broker, it is exceptionally expensive to join CAR, when mainly you are forced to join in order to simply obtain the forms because nearly everyone in the business uses their forms. Why are there effectively no other choices? Because Joel Singer (CEO of CAR) has single handedly managed to lock out other third party software bundlers who could produce a superior product on phoney and dubious reasons. It has always been my contention the most people join CAR in order to obtain the forms….not for the other services. And if there were any viable choices for agents, CAR would immediately suffer as much as a 40 to 50% loss in membership. Singer knows this and somehow still manages by this anti-competitive practice to bolster his membership knowing full well what real competition would do to his membership. It doesn’t stop there, however. The outrage is compounded by the fact the CAR owns the “for profit” company that produces their software, with top officers in CAR sitting in top manangement spots in ZipLogix. This is the living, breathing definition of a conflict of interest. Proof of the relationship between their forms and the size of their membership is the high percentage of the cost of their membership that constitutes the price for a nom-member for the Zip logic forms. On their website they parade their forms software as “free” when cost of their forms software for non-members as a percentage of their actual membership cost speaks for itself. Another big racket is the annual “renewal” dues, which outragiously are roughly the same as the initial membership dues. No wonder CAR is the biggest state real estate association in the U.S.
In the late 70’s or early 80’s CAR got sued on anti-trust grounds and monopolizing the MLS services — the result was (and it’s still the law as far as I know) that you need not join your local realtor’s association to be an MLS member — they used to withhold “comps” from such members but you still have full access to the MLS system — these days it’s not as big a deal as it was back then when we had no internet.
It is a BIG DEAL! We have no choice but to join CAR because that’s the only way we get access to the forms. I pay for Docusign so why can’t I choose to just pay for forms without all the rest? I don’t need nor do I want anything else that CAR sells us. It’s not an open FREE market by any means.
Stop wining about CAR…the yearly cost is nominal and the benefits are great! Zipforms, “free” legal advice that if you went to an attorney would cost you the same as your CAR membership and you can use it anytime you need it as much as you want, then there is the legislative advocacy working to help us and homeowners stop, modify or pass legislation that could harm or benefit us, the market forecast help us plan our futures and the public relations campaigns promoting REALTORS as a necessity for a smooth transaction and a professional representation.
Now where can you get all these benefits, and there are more, for what you pay CAR annually? Very few business can you operate with overhead expenses for less than $1,000 a year? NAR, CAR and your local association memberships are the best deal around. Only non-productive agents wine about this because professional productive ones have the money and know it’s a great benefit to belong to all three! Stop wining and get productive. If you make your business pie bigger this is a nominal, deductible expense.
First of all, I’m a 35-year broker licensee, (not an agent) who was formerly with the largest full service commercial real estate company in the world. So please spare me the lecture about productive vs non-product agents. And for the record, CAR didn’t do squat for this company’s agents. I’m glad you are happy with the services the CAR provides you, though I’m not sure a portion of their members would say the same. Nothing you’ve posted in your response addressed the conflicts of interest I pointed out. Please show me an example of another statewide real estate association (in another state) that locks out all third party software developers and forces their membership to buy only the forms of a “for profit” company that they own. Also, compare the dues of some of these associations with the dues of CAR, and ask if they could charge the same as CAR’s without forcing their members into purchasing only the forms of a company they own.
I don’t know any job that you have to pay to work, I feel they are collecting our money for their political agenda
In the late 70’s or early 80’s CAR got sued on anti-trust grounds and monopolizing the MLS services,
It’s called a shakedown racket,in my jurisdiction I have be a “member” to to have access to the Sentri lock keys the local parasite boards are equally to blame but the big problem is the godfather of them all. Nar
There have been many instances over the years where it has been evident that professional real estate agents are much more of a market for CAR, and AOR’s, than a member-supporting union. Perhaps CAR should supply agents with a mandatory dual-agency disclosure that shows that they, CAR, are working for the members, as well as working for a profit? Like virtually all instances, including our own dual-agency gift, it is hard to serve two masters. CAR is not a union. They are a commercial venture where the members come second. They do provide some value, but they also maintain business advantages through arguably monopolistic tendencies.
That said, the argument that the CAR form system is somehow inferior doesn’t mean that much to me. Of course it does depend on just how inferior they might be. Sometimes it’s just the proverbial “better mousetrap”. And other times it serves little purpose at all to change something that is working well, aside from justifying a programmer’s salary, etc. So I don’t fault them for not taking part in the constant star-chasing effort of staying cutting edge, when it really doesn’t make that much difference.
But yes, PDFfiller has a decent case overall, IMHO. Oh, BTW, I am not an attorney. :-)
If I were to argue in this case I would argue that CAR is involved in racketeering under RICO, and has by its continuity of relationship used zipforms and such lawsuits to extort funds form the profession and to prevent access sans such extortion.
I think that we should not have to belong to three different associations to sell real estate! NAR, CAR and then a local as well.
MLS should be kept separate from the associations.
These associations are just money grabbers taking our money and providing little or nothing in return!
I agree totally. On another subject, we also need to get rid of “DUAL AGENCY” all together! There should only be 1 seller agent and 1 buyer agent representative both from 2 different brokers. We should not allow 1 agent to represent both sides, its unethical in my opinion. You can’t represent both parties and still be able to ethically protect one or the other? Therefore, why should it be allowed? The National Association and CAR needs to come up with a form that agents sign to confirm that they only work hard for either a seller or a buyer and not both. The consumer should never have to worry if the agent is undermining their services. Having “DUAL AGENCY” allows listing agents to unethically find buyers before and during the listing process before its marketed on the MLS. I’m sure we’ve all come across a listings that get sold immediately after its listed and we all know what happened those cases (DUAL COMMISSIONS)…right? Anyway my point is, we all pay our expensive dues each yr, monthly or 4 years to all 3 associations and therefore we all deserve to be PROTECTED BY ALL 3 associations individually. Otherwise, why should we be paying expensive dues to the NAR, CAR or MLS’s if all Realtors can not get the same opportunity to make money due to “DUAL AGENCY UNETHICAL PRACTICES”? Not to mention, some of these dual agents have close connections to mortgage loan representatives and other vendors through personal relationships (marriage, sibling or In-laws, best friends).
I totally agree…dual agency should be done away with…it’s unethical for either the buyer or the seller.
Your argument misses an important issue in that it does not address who ends up paying for the Buyer’s agent. Buyer’s generally do not expect or want to pay for Buyer’s agent services, and now, there is litigation where Seller’s are upset for them having to foot the Buyer’s agent commission. At the end of the day, a homeowner hires a broker to sell their home at the highest and best price. Seller’s are not at all concerned with having to pay for an adversarial Buyer’s agent advocating against them to their very own detriment. The solution would be for the Seller to hire a broker to represent them and their interests only and for the Buyer to hire their own agent to represent them exclusively. But again, this will become a burden on Buyer’s and may adversely impact the market by discouraging Buyers who cannot foot the bill of their own representation.
It is NOT NECESSARY TO BELONG TO THE three-level CARTEL to “practice real estate brokerage”. MLS (home advertising) services may be purchased without local, CAR (state) & AOR (national) membership. 1st Tuesday offers a very fine selection of general brokerage contract choices.
We have no choice. If the Broker is a member, agents have to pay up. It’s a racket tantamount to a monopoly by any other standard, and a lobbying group. I’ve heard they fly private jets to DC. $1000 a year is a lot of money that an agent could use for marketing i.e. to actually generate business instead of paying for a bunch of elites to have a good time and huge salaries! It’s time to collaborate and break up this cartel.
I’m shocked that another company hasn’t stepped up and developed a new set of forms for us to use. The CAR forms are soooo long and complicated making them almost impossible to explain to a client. I keep waiting for Zillow or Trulia to come up with their own set of forms.
J. Elliot,
RPI (Realty Publications, Inc.) is an independent forms publisher with over 400 completely free forms. Please visit our Forms Download page to download and use forms.
Regards,
ft Editorial
the CAR forms are also not very good. i find them to be agent-centric and include much that i carve out. i find many agents have NO IDEA what’s in them and when they get my explanations for the many changes i make they often tell me they want those same changes but their broker “requires” certain forms. i am frequently telling them i don’t care what their broker wants or needs…the broker is not the seller or buyer and their “requirements” are of no concern to me. the big franchise brokers have a long history of hiring dullards and their form sets are simply a way for them to reduce the liability that the dullards bring with them. when i hear that ziplogix is being sued by the AG someplace i will join the class
Personally, I have been using First Tuesday Forms (RPI) for a number of years. There is a great variety of different forms for almost any conceivable situation. AND, I didn’t have to pay $700-$900 for the privilege of having a form that I can complete on the computer.
Professional Publishing forms (in operation decades before CAR’s forms existed) have also been squeezed by CAR’s dominance. Professional Publishing was a particular favorite of Northern CA real estate firms with easy-to-understand and fully vetted legal forms. Many other quality forms existed, like those from First Tuesday or those produced by Realtor associations in specific regions.
Then the multi-office statewide brokerages decided it was advantageous to have all their agents throughout CA use identical forms. They put their support behind CAR, for various reasons. Membership dues went up and CAR forms were provided “free”. As noted, many agents mistakenly believe they can only use CAR forms, but this is merely a requirement of their brokerages, not of the CalBRE.
Thankfully, Professional Publishing forms continue to be available to agents, attorneys, and consumers as either annual subscriptions through Ziplogix (at http://www.TrueForms.com,) or one-at-a-time from http://www.ProPubForms.com.
Your Excellent points of view and information in your memo was well expressed. The readers may recall that in the late ’50s, preceding the very fine PROFESSIONAL PUBLISHING forms and contracts, the first publication (of ProPub) was The REAL ESTATE BLUE BOOK. Most real estate brokers/agents carried this popular reference in their possession as a learning tool (very rare at those times) and to depend upon as guiding information, including amortization tables, to design and write transaction listing & buy-sell agreements – yes, write their own custom contracts to confirm gentlemen agreements representing their client’s interest. LeMoine Bond, Realty Counsel, since 1962, CaDRE #00287022
Both CAR forms and non-CAR forms have basically the same content, developed by agents and brokers since the early 1900’s and updated by both CAR and non-CAR providers based on current legislation and judicial rulings. It’s incorrect to say that CAR authored the forms.
If CAR prepares the forms and has authored them, why should another firm be able to benefit from selling another company’s product? I understand why RPI and PDFfiller would love to be able to use someone else’s forms and resell them and make money on the process, but fair is fair. Let RPI and PDFfiller develop their own forms and if the consumer/agents feel that the forms, other than the CAR forms, are better then let them use those with their clients. If their brokers do not permit them to use other forms than CAR’s then they have the ability to transfer their license and use whatever forms they desire. I am well aware of the massive effort that is put into keeping the CAR forms updated and relevant. Why should other companies be able to be parasitic and live off of others efforts?
Monopoly by any other name is still monopoly. That’s why CAR paid Hillary Clintonthe big bucks for a lousy convention speech.
Check the other companies forms before you assume all are copies of CAR. NO COMPANY SHOULD HAVE ABSOLUTE CONTROL. Free enterprise is essential or you would all be working for the same company in absolute control of you and your brokers.
Talk about free enterprise but fail to acknowledge CAR’s immense investment to create ‘their’ forms. To me those forms belong to CAR and CAR only. Nothing prevents anybody from building their own forms from scratch if we don’t like it.
RPI doesn’t steal the CAR forms — they’ve been developed by Fred Crane and his staff for decades — and you can easily see the difference. RPI forms have always been easier to use and understand than the CAR counterparts.