"Werq It and Sell It Houston"
Timothy is a native Texan and Houstonian who uniquely personifies a modern, urban professional with a traditional southern charm. As a Realtor, Tim utilizes over a decade of professional experience and a dedication to excellence to provide a simple, reliable, and straightforward approach to buying and selling real estate in the Greater Houston Area.
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$ 2,550 / Rental - Multi-Family,
2 Beds , 1 & 1/2 Baths,
1,758 Sqft , Year Built: 1940 ,
MLS# 72763238 (HAR) /For Rent
Broker: Jane Byrd Properties International LLC
Represented: Buyer
Represented: Seller
Represented: Buyer
Represented: Renter
Represented: Renter
Represented: Renter
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This is definitely a question you should contact your broker and possibly an attorney about, because we don’t have the docs in front of us, and we don’t know the whole story. With that said, and going strictly off what you’ve stated, that’s incorrect- the only way you can “override” or void a previous amendment is by stating that the terms of a previous amendment are either amended or voided. As an extreme example, if you had 3 repairs that a buyer and seller agreed to, and for funsies or some form of self-loathing, you wanted to put each negotiated repair into a separate amendment, you could theoretically do that, and unless you inserted the words “This amendment voids all previous amendments” or “Repair xyz in the previous amendment effective 00/00/0000 is hereby struck/voided.” Then the previous 50 amendments that have been put into play are still valid and enforceable. \n\nAgain, if the title company is really pushing this, I would involve your broker, and get the opinion of the other agent too, because any changes to the contract or amendments could have seriously detrimental effects on both the buyer and seller, and unless you broker or an attorney tells you that everything should be changed, I wouldn’t do it. The title agent isn’t an attorney, and they are not always right, as much as they like to think they are.
It’s the equivalent of you and your soon-to-be ex spouse using the same attorney in a divorce where you both claim no-fault and you’re both looking to get the kids, house, and all of the money.\n\nOr, just tell them that intermediary WITH appointments is great, because they both get their own agent and can both be advised and assisted without any possibility of the agent representing them breaking the law or their fiduciary duty. Intermediary WITHOUT appointments means they get -ZERO- representation, -ZERO- advice, and -ZERO- benefit because the agent legally can not advise either client, at which point they’re essentially just a very expensive file clerk. The only time I will ever do an intermediary w/out appointments is on a lease, and after I’ve thoroughly explained exactly what an intermediary is. However, even then I hate doing them because I feel like I’m somehow abusing the trust both of those clients have placed in me.
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