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Showing posts with label Raleigh Real estate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Raleigh Real estate. Show all posts

Friday, October 1, 2010

Private Transfer Fees


Private Transfer Fees
You got to just love this one. [Please insert sarcasm here!] Some new home community developers have instituted this little gem, A PRIVATE TRANSFER FEE. This practice is now banned in only 16 states, but here is how it works.

Consumer comes along and buys a new home from a developer and a little lien is placed on their deed and ALL subsequent deeds imposing a private transfer fee. These fees can be as high as 1%...$100,000 sale price = $1000 transfer fee, but it doesn’t go away with one sale, it is appurtenant which means it stays with the property FOREVER, which means every time someone sells, the DEVELOPER gets a slice of the seller’s pie.

This is so wrong but it does illustrate why it is essential that real estate consumers hire a full time, professional, market savvy real estate professional.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Wynterfield Dream Home

Michael Sullivan | MLSullivanDev.Corp | (919) 416-2254
1402 Holly Grove Way, Durham, NC
Next to RTP
2BR/2+1BA Townhouse
$1,085/month
Bedrooms 2
Bathrooms 2 full, 1 partial
Sq Footage 1,540
Parking 2 dedicated
Pet Policy No pets
Deposit $1,085

DESCRIPTION

Light and bright end unit townhome just minutes to RTP, NCCU, Duke and UNC. Quiet location. Great space with living room, dining room, family room, two and a half baths and two bedrooms.

Appliances stay with this home.

Available November 1st or there abouts.


see additional photos below
RENTAL FEATURES
























- Air conditioning- Central heat- Fireplace
- High/Vaulted ceiling- Walk-in closet- Dining room
- Breakfast nook- Dishwasher- Refrigerator
- Stove/Oven- Microwave- Washer
- Dryer

COMMUNITY FEATURES




- Garage parking


LEASE TERMS

One year or more.
ADDITIONAL PHOTOS


Photo 1
Contact info:




Michael Sullivan
MLSullivanDev.Corp
(919) 416-2254

powered by postlets Equal Opportunity Housing
Posted: Sep 15, 2010, 10:03am PDT

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

The Beach and a resolution



So, I thought that I’d do another installment on the beach saga. After my initial go round with the agent in Carteret County, I did call and leave a message stating that I thought I should handle the lease on my place down there myself. That I’d be happy to pay the agency on Harker’s Island a finder’s fee for bringing a tenant to me. I think that's fair. No one should work for free.

A day went by and silence from area code 252; I did hear from my mom and dad, but nothing, nil, nada from the agent. By yesterday afternoon I was becoming somewhat antsy. I typically don’t leave messages hanging around on my voice mail or email and I really don’t care for it when others do so. Finally mid-afternoon at 2:05 pm an email came. The email tendered the tenant's name and phone number. The agent demurred on a finder’s fee stating that since he didn’t have a management agreement in place when he started down the representation path that he felt he wasn’t due compensation.

I do agree and disagree with that and I do understand this fellow’s soft peddle on compensation. I imagine the North Carolina Real Estate Commission would have a fit over all of this if it were reported; it won’t be. So here’s my advice to all of you out in the blogesphere; if you engage an agent for buying, selling, renting or leasing make sure that you have an agreement in writing outlining who, why, where, how, how much and when. This situation turned out well but it just as easily couldn’t have. What I would have done in the beach agent shoes is emailed an agreement to Durham outlining terms and we would have hammered all of this out before a tenant even entered the picture. The lesson I’ve learned, insist that others do things right each and every time.

Coming soon…my on-going discussion with an agent who won’t disclose to me whether or not he has an exclusive right to sell listing agreement on a listing in which he states in Multiple Listing that the home is “EO” or “Entry Only.” The Real Estate Commission views this designation “EO” as simply advertising and not offering advice or counsel as in an agency relationship.

Interested in buying, selling, renting or leasing property in Raleigh, Durham, Cary and Chapel Hill, North Carolina; call or text me to 919-608-2372 or email MSullivan@fmrealty.com

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

2011 North Carolina Offer To Purchase & Contract















Finally the new North Carolina offer to purchase and contract a la 2011 version for residential real estate is out for preview. Hold tight though, it’s not out for use just yet; a bit of a teaser preview. Truly I have been giddy with anticipation and I can’t wait to use it. Oh if we could use it today that would be wonderful.

Stunningly and startlingly alternative one and alternative two are GONE, blown away by the tides of change, a bad idea whose time has come and whose time has sunk into the vestiges of time. Very few of us ever used alternative two, which for a few more months; is a buyer’s option contract. Buyer still has the option of alternative one, the typical real estate deal with earnest money, investigation, re-negotiation of deficiencies and inevitable squabbles over earnest money with sellers when repairs cannot be agreed upon. Or they can still choose the alternative two stepchild; this alternative allows the buyer to put down both earnest money and option money, option dollars are paid right to the seller and if for ANY reason or NO reason by the end of the option period the buyer doesn’t buy the house, then the seller keeps the option money and everyone walks away no foul. Please insert sarcasm (here!) Folks still squabble and squawk over earnest money.

Well at least let’s hope that’s the case. I was listing agent on a property here in Durham on Camden Ave. and an agent with a company whose logo is a blue rock, brought a buyer and we agreed to an alternative two contract. The option time came and went with a flurry of inspections, investigations, repair requests, negotiations and agreements, etc. etc. etc. Then a somewhat lengthy delay to closing and here’s where we hit ballyhoo. The closing attorney a Mr. Booger (name slightly modified) out of Chapel Hill, well after the option period, for ANY and ALL investigations, where the buyer for ANY or NO reason whatever may terminate and walk away from the contract; decides that late in the game that he was going to order survey, title work etc. to whit he discovers that the subject property’s fence is partially on the neighbor’s yard, just a few inches and in this day and age, easily ignored by everyone. Not that I think this ignorance is a good idea; but it is what we do on the caveat that if in the future the neighbors say move the fence…well then the new owners will move the fence.

Well the good attorney Booger starts to make waves. He even goes so far to say that he doesn’t care what the contract says, that if the seller wants to sell then the fence must be moved. He’s always done his title work late in the game and this is just the way it is. Well so much for an officer of the court upholding the letter of the contract and the law. He was so terrible, so awful and so was the big, blue rock agent; that we on the seller’s side took the fence down so that the property would close, that opened a whole new can of worms; but tough noogies to the buyer, their beef was with THEIR attorney and AGENT. So, I digressed didn’t I? Ah yes the new offer to purchase and contract.

Gone are the days of house systems and structures “functioning the purpose for which intended and not in need of immediate repair.” The buyer now has a “due diligence” period to investigate the property and during that period, for ANY reason or NO reason may terminate the contract and the seller may keep the due diligence fee; take note Mr. Chapel Hill attorney, this includes surveys too. There can still be earnest money, but this needn’t be the case; there can be due diligence money, but this also needn’t be the case. GONE is any discussion about specific systems and inspection. Essentially the process is made easier, buyer comes alone, buyer offers, buyer writes a due diligence check to the seller, buyer prescribes a diligence period and investigates. Buyer may make a repair request but seller doesn’t even need to respond and if buyer isn’t happy with that then they may terminate the contract; but it is gonna cost them the diligence fee; if they move ahead and close, they get a credit for the fee.

So as always the devil is in the details, as a listing agent I am going to push my seller clients to accept just a diligence fee and NO earnest money and this way if the buyer terminates everyone walks away. I love it; gone will be the days of a buyer agent just throwing it all against the wall, of low balling, of recommending inept inspectors who will scuttle a deal. In reality I see all parties getting very serious when a home is under contract. Hopefully the days of willie, nillie walking away from a binding contract are numbered; of course we’re always going to have to deal with the odd ball attorney who doesn’t believe in following the written contract…but hopefully they too will become fewer and further between.

Want to learn more...call or text me 919-608-2372
Email me MSullivan@fmrealty.com
Visit my web site TeamMichaelSullivan.com

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Red shoes...red home...find it...buy it...



Red Shoes….
You need a pair of red shoes to go with that outfit. You go to the mall, you go to your favorite store, you find a pair of red shoes. You try them on, they fit perfectly. They sparkle, they shine, they are brilliant. The price is right, the fit like butter to your feet. Do you buy them, no of course not, you go to every other store in the mall looking for a better shoe and then ultimately come back to the first pair hoping that they are still there.
This is not the way to buy a home, in this market or any market. National news media has been howling for months that it is a buyer’s real estate market. Well that is and isn’t true. It might be a buyer’s market in Nevada where one in fifty four homes is in foreclosure. Here in Raleigh/Durham that is not the case and if one is looking for a home outside a mc subdivision it is difficult to find the right home, at the right fit and at the right price. My advice to buyers, once you have found the right fit….buy it or it may not be around tomorrow.

707 Beckett Street Durham NC 27712









707 Beckett Street Durham NC 27712

Just a short drive north on Guess road, a mere fifteen minutes from downtown Durham you’ll find 707 Beckett Street in Canterbury Estates and serenity now.
This well cared for ranch style home sits on over six tenths of an acre and is nestled behind a stand of trees. Inside is an absolutely huge living room, with vaulted ceiling and a fireplace and a door to a rear deck, which overlooks a fully fenced rear yard.

The kitchen is updated with new 42 inch cabinets and Corian counter tops. The range, refrigerator and microwave oven stay with this home, as does the dishwasher. In addition to the eat-in- kitchen there is a formal dining room.
This home has three nicely sized bedrooms, a master with its own private bath and ample closet space. The bathrooms have been updated too.

You will love the low county taxes and the seller paid home warranty which is offered for buyer peace of mind.

To see 707 Beckett Street, phone or text Michael Sullivan at 919-608-2372 or email MSullivan@fmrealty.com you may also visit Michael on the web at TeamMichaelSullivan.com or TeamMichaelSullivan.net to learn more about his listed properties.

23 Prestwick Place Durham NC 27705








23 Prestwick Place in the Walden Pond neighborhood is just five minutes to Duke University, Duke Hospital and the VA Medical Center. This lovely townhouse is light, bright, open, airy and well kept. It is also very tastefully decorated and will compliment any décor.

On the main level is a modern, full equipped galley kitchen with modern appliances. There is a nifty pass through which could be converted into a breakfast bar if so desired. Beyond the kitchen is a large living room/dining room combination with a wall of windows at the rear and a wood burning masonry fireplace tucked into the corner of the room. The main level also has a half bath which has been nicely updated. At the living room a door leads to a brand new tree top deck.
Down one level is a full laundry space, a ceramic tiled bath and what could be a third bedroom, a family room, a home office, game room or bonus room. This space has a door to a large ground level patio.

The second floor offers two spacious bedrooms, a full ceramic tiled bath and lots of closet space.

23 Prestwick Place Durham NC 27705 is move in ready. A one year H.S.A. Warranty is offered on this property. The roof has been recently replaced as have the front and rear decks. The current owner has also had the Polybuteleyne piping removed from the property.

Interested in seeing inside? Call Michael Sullivan at 919-416-2254 or 919-608-2372 mobile/text or email him at MSullivan@fmrealty.com. You can learn more about Michael’s listings by visiting TeamMichaelSullivan.com