Calhoun Times

Contract terminatio­ns

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because we’re trying to mirror the contracts that we’ve seen standardiz­ed by the Georgia Associatio­n of Realtors. They’re called GAR forms for short.

Are the GAR forms great? Yes. That’s because the Georgia Associatio­n of Realtors spends a lot of time and money having their attorneys revise them annually. Are they perfect for all the scenarios that investors encounter? No. And truthfully, if an agent isn’t involved in your transactio­n, you aren’t supposed to be using any of the GAR Forms anyway.

We had something crazy happen while we were selling a house using a GAR purchase and sale agreement (PSA). We’d been under contract for three months – it was one of those deals from Hell. To make a long story short, we were hoping our buyers could get the financing to take this house off our hands.

A week after the last possible extensions had expired, we got word that the buyers couldn’t get financing. It’d been three months and one week since we placed this house under contract, and I wanted it back on market ASAP! My listing broker said we had to wait for a signed terminatio­n of contract before we could do anything, though. I asked why this was the case since the contract had been dead for a week?

The broker responded, “A contract never ends until you have a signed terminatio­n.”

I asked why contracts contain dates and why extensions are needed if they never expire without signed terminatio­ns. I also asked what happens if a buyer refuses to sign the terminatio­n.

I was sure the broker was mistaken about contracts never ending. In an attempt to prove it, I went and read the GAR PSA line by line. Believer it or not, the date I was assuming to be the expiration of the contract is referred to as “the closing date.” As I read further, the document never defines it as a maturity date or an expiration date; it doesn’t contain any language that assures that the contract terminates after this date.

That freaked me out so much I called my attorney. He disagreed with the notion that a contract never ends without a signed terminatio­n. He said if that were the case and you couldn’t get a terminatio­n signed, it would create a title flaw on the property because a PSA is basically an unrecorded option. He also pointed out that if the closing date was not also meant to be the contract’s maturity date, there shouldn’t be stipulatio­ns for extensions.

Our ex- buyers weren’t in any hurry to terminate the agreement; it took an additional three weeks before we got a signed terminatio­n. That was a total of four weeks past any extension! I was irate.

After t alking with many other agents, I found they predominan­tly agreed with my attorney and that perhaps someone was getting the procedure of when earnest money could be dispersed confused with when the contract ends. Either way, I think this is something the GAR attorneys should address next time they make a revision to the PSA.

So should you be scared to sign a GAR PSA? Why no. They’re great forms, and there’re used in the majority of closings. But if this issue makes you nervous, write into the special stipulatio­ns section a statement like, “This contract expires on the closing date unless an appropriat­e extension is utilized.” That should take care of it.

Joe and Ashley English buy houses and mobile homes in Northwest Georgia. For more informatio­n or to ask a question, go to www. cashflowwi­thjoe. com or call Joe at 678986- 6813.

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