California lawyers won’t help with loan modifications
Greater numbers of California lawyers are turning down homeowners fighting for a loan modification since state
advance fee law prevents them from being paid until and unless their client receives a loan modification.
Strict advance fee regulations for lawyers were the result of an effort to eliminate real estate scammers, who
made big promises to desperate homeowners before disappearing with their up-front fees. A side effect of the
increased protection is that honest lawyers (and brokers) who are not willing to defer payment are forced, until
the objective has been attained, to sit on the sidelines and leave underwater homeowners without their
representation.
While many states have courts overseeing foreclosure proceedings, the California process is handled privately
between lender and borrower. Since lenders are generally unwilling and notoriously slow to process modifications,
there is diminished opportunity for lawyers to provide their legal assistance to underwater homeowners.
Sure N EZ's take: The reporter failed to consider that in California the primary sources
of advice on real estate transactions, mortgages and leasing are real estate licensees—not attorneys. However, a
widespread belief exists in California that there is no dichotomy for the giving of legal advice. This is the real
estate trade union mantra to keep the dumb agent rule in effect and deprive the public of the
only source of information readily available to them on a contingency fee basis. Legal aspects of real
estate are known to the real estate licensee as a blatant matter of basic and continuing education (CE).
No such exclusive right exists for attorneys to give real estate advice on matters that affect a real estate
transaction’s legality, tax repercussions, or utility (for an example, look no further than escrow and title
companies, the epitome of those who dispense legal advice as a matter of necessity on all sorts of real estate
matters).
Even the settlement of disputes in real estate transactions is handled by the brokers and agents involved in the
transaction, as this is exactly what they are contracted to do as licensees. Negotiations are the
name of the agent representation game when acting on behalf of a client in a real estate deal.
If it comes to litigation and strategy for litigation, then the attorney is the one authorized by law to advise
on the practice of law – namely the setting of probabilities of
a successful action and the compliance with procedures in their management of that action.
“I’m not an attorney, but…” This is how the insecure broker/agent, inculcated in the doctrine of the
dumb agent rule, begins to give advice he senses he must give when the client does understanding
what the real estate law is, or is acting in a fashion ignorant of the law. The law is a material
fact, which may have an adverse affect on the client – and the broker need not defer to an attorney as
though a lesser professional to tell the client what the broker or his agent in the transaction already know.
Simply, brokers do deals (and unlawful detainer (UD) actions), and render all the legal and tax
advice that could possibly be coupled with that transaction (agreements to lease, borrow,
purchase/sell); attorneys do court (and as licensed generalists may do deals), and all the
forms needed to get that job done to accomplish the courtroom objective.
All this rendering of legal advice has to do with the authority granted by the license one holds and the
business one can hold themselves out to practice. Once retained, brokers and agents must do all that any other
member of the real estate profession would be expected and capable of doing in the way of advice, whether on the
real estate, trust deed or landlord-tenant law involved, contracting or tax aspects of the transaction, or on the
list of all the other material facts related to the transaction.
*caveat to attorneys: nearly every activity in real estate is controlled by a code, regulation or case law,
and brokers are duty bound to know and advise their clients on them or they will be held incompetent to
practice real estate brokerage.
Agents and brokers can step up to the plate and provide homeowners with counseling, advice and information to
complete a loan modification, all part of negotiating or compromising the terms of a loan. The sooner these
considerations are taken to heart and put into action, the sooner the real estate market will recover — making
these efforts particularly relevant to those who make a living buying and selling homes and investment properties
or managing property.
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