Oh yeah...and i still dislike EA's when purchasing a property. We were once looking at a house and EA asked us what our professions were (we told her, thought she was just making conversation...egets!!) and she cheekily said "oh well then you can offer more that the asking price, come on you can afford it"!!!..unreal!
we're paying for someone else pulling out of the sale before us.
... might be something to post here on a new site [broken link removed]
Whay are all the rated auctioneers form Cork while no Dublin auctioneers are rated at all ??????? Can we call this site ratemyauctioneerincork.com in future ??
The Sale Agreed code of practice for the AIVI is for the EA to stop advertising it as For Sale (billboards and website). Continuing to offer it For Sale while S.Agreed is considered sharp practice and would not be condoned by the EA industry - I'd ring the IAVI and see what they can do (there's no legal recourse) http://www.realestate.ie/Thanks for the responses - personally I feel that without the Sale Agreed notice the For Sale notice is effectively encouraging offers. I do think that Sale Agreed means something do, while obviously either party can pull out, in an honest spirit, Sale Agreed means simply that you've agreed to sell it to that person at x price and that's that - once contracts are signed I would have thought the sign would go to Sold - what's the point in changing the sign to Sale Agreed once contracts are signed??
Of course, the EA works for the vendor so they're legally obliged to refer all offers to them. They're supposed to recommend the vendor not accept any gazumping offers but anyone who's ever been gazumped knows that most vendors can't resist the extra cash!
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