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  2. Can one Realtor represent both buyer and seller? What ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/one-realtor-represent-both...

    In a dual agency situation, the same real estate agent represents both the buyer and the seller of a home. This arrangement can be risky for buyers, since agents are paid based on how much the ...

  3. Dual Agency: How a Real Estate Agent May Be Two-Timing You - AOL

    www.aol.com/2012/02/28/dual-agency-how-your-real...

    By Matt Carter and Andrea V. Brambila Republished with permission from Inman News. Homebuyers sometimes gripe that their real estate agent seems more interested in closing a sale and collecting a ...

  4. Exclusive buyer agent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exclusive_buyer_agent

    While some states have, at the insistence of Realtor trade groups, created various forms of dual agency to allow one company and in some cases an individual agent to represent both sides, other states have continued to hold such practices as illegal. In the opinion of EBAs, it is not possible to faithfully represent the best interests of ...

  5. Real estate agent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Real_estate_agent

    This business decision is for the licensee to decide. They are fines for people acting as real estate agents when not licensed by the state. In the United Kingdom, an estate agent is a person or business entity whose business is to market real estate on behalf of clients. There are significant differences between the actions, powers ...

  6. How the NAR legal settlement could impact local realtors ...

    www.aol.com/nar-legal-settlement-could-impact...

    Kilgore estimated that the number of agents could decrease as much as 50% as a result of the NAR settlement, with the remaining agents likely to be "more professional, more efficient agents."

  7. Law of agency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_agency

    The law of agency is an area of commercial law dealing with a set of contractual, quasi-contractual and non-contractual fiduciary relationships that involve a person, called the agent, who is authorized to act on behalf of another (called the principal) to create legal relations with a third party. [1]

  8. Principal (commercial law) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Principal_(commercial_law)

    In commercial law, a principal is a person, legal or natural, who authorizes an agent to act to create one or more legal relationships with a third party.This branch of law is called agency and relies on the common law proposition qui facit per alium, facit per se (from Latin: "he who acts through another, acts personally").

  9. Apparent authority - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apparent_authority

    The agent must have been held out by someone with actual authority to carry out the transaction and an agent cannot hold himself out as having authority for this purpose. [6] The acts of the company as principal must constitute a representation (express or by conduct) that the agent had a particular authority and must be reasonably understood ...