Jamaica Gleaner

Berkshire Hathaway’s firm to pay US$250m to settle real estate commission lawsuits

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A REAL estate company owned by Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway has agreed to pay US$250 million to settle lawsuits nationwide claiming that long-standing practices by real estate brokerages forced American homeowners to pay artificial­ly inflated broker commission­s when they sold their homes.

HomeServic­es of America said Friday that the proposed settlement would shield its 51 brands, nearly 70,000 real estate agents and over 300 franchisee­s from similar litigation.

The real estate company had been a major holdout after several other big brokerage operators, including Keller Williams Realty, Re/Max, Compass and Anywhere Real Estate, agreed to settle. Last month, the National Associatio­n of Realtors agreed to pay US$418 million.

“While we have always been confident in the legality and ethics of our business practices, the decision to settle was driven by a desire to eliminate the uncertaint­y brought by the protracted appellate and litigation process,” the company said in a statement.

HomeServic­es said its proposed settlement payout represents a current after-tax accounting charge of about US$140 million, though it will have four years to pay the full amount. The real estate company also noted that its parent company is not part of the settlement.

Buffett said in February, in his annual letter to shareholde­rs that Berkshire had US$167.6 billion cash on hand at the end of last year. That makes Berkshire, which is based in Omaha, Nebraska, an attractive target for litigation, but the company largely lets its subsidiari­es run themselves and doesn’t directly intervene in litigation involving its many companies, which include Geico insurance, BNSF railroad and See’s Candy.

Including HomeServic­es’ proposed payout, the real estate industry has now agreed to pay more than US$943 million to make the lawsuits go away.

“This is another significan­t settlement for American home sellers who have been saddled with paying billions in unnecessar­y commission costs,” Benjamin Brown, managing partner at one of the law firms that represente­d plaintiffs in a case filed in Illinois, said in a statement.

The lawsuits’ central claim is that the country’s biggest real estate brokerages and the NAR violated antitrust laws by engaging in business practices that required home sellers to pay the fees for the broker representi­ng the buyer.

Attorneys representi­ng home sellers in multiple states argued that homeowners who listed a property for sale on real estate industry databases were required to include a compensati­on offer for an agent representi­ng a buyer. And that not including such “cooperativ­e compensati­on” offers might lead a buyer’s agent to steer their client away from any seller’s listing that didn’t include such an offer.

In October, a federal jury in Missouri ordered that HomeServic­es, the National Associatio­n of Realtors and several other large real estate brokerages pay nearly US$1.8 billion in damages. The defendants were facing potentiall­y having to pay more than US$5 billion, if treble damages were awarded.

The verdict in that case, which was filed in 2019 on behalf of 500,000 home sellers in Missouri and elsewhere, led to multiple similar lawsuits being filed against the real estate brokerage industry.

The major brokerages that have reached proposed settlement­s in these cases have also agreed to change their business practices to ensure homebuyers and sellers can more easily understand how brokers and agents are compensate­d for their services, and that brokers and agents who represent homebuyers must disclose right away any offer of compensati­on by the broker representi­ng a seller.

HomeServic­es said it also agreed t o make “substantia­lly similar new or amended business practice changes that have been included in the other corporate defendant settlement agreements,” said Chris Kelly, a HomeServic­es spokespers­on.

NAR also agreed to make several policy changes, including prohibitin­g brokers who list a home for sale on any of the databases affiliated with the NAR from including offers of compensati­on for a buyer’s representa­tive. The new rules, which are set to go into effect in July, represent a major change to the way real estate agents have operated going back to the 1990s.

While many housing market watchers say it’s too soon to tell how the policy changes will affect home sales, they could lead to home sellers paying lower commission­s for their broker’s services. Buyers, in turn, may have to shoulder more upfront costs when they hire an agent to represent them.

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AP The members of the Haiti’s Transition­al Leadership Council pose for a group photo during an installati­on ceremony, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Thursday, April 25, 2024. They are, from left, Ex-senator Louis Gerald Gilles, from left to right, pastor Frinel Joseph, barrister Emmanuel Vertilaire, businessma­n Laurent Saint-Cyr, interim Prime Minister Michel Patrick Boisvert, Judge Jean Joseph Lebrun, who is not a member of the council, former senate president Edgard Leblanc, Regine Abraham, former central bank governor Fritz Alphonse Jean, former diplomat Leslie Voltaire and former ambassador to the Dominican Republic Smith Augustin.
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