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A disgraced real-estate agent has admitted consulting a traditiona­l Hindu “jyotishee” to help sell a home — using astrology to predict auspicious times to market the property and sign contracts.

But the Asian guru’s apparent good fortune has backfired on the agent, who has been found guilty of serious misconduct and stripped of his licence for six months.

A just-released Real Estate Agents Disciplina­ry Tribunal decision says Auckland-based David Hilliam was an agent with Zest for Realty Ltd, trading as RE/MAX Zest.

“Mr Hilliam follows certain Asian religious beliefs and practices and incorporat­es aspects of these, in particular numerology, into his realestate work.”

The complainan­ts, Christa Herbst and Clinton Holmes, agreed to contract Hilliam to sell their 2.5ha Waiuku property in 2016.

“Mr Hilliam discussed with them how he would incorporat­e numerologi­cal practices into the sale, including contacting his jyotishee for informatio­n as to auspicious days and times to carry out certain steps in the marketing and sale process.”

Jyotishee is a traditiona­l form of Hindu astrology for tracking and predicting movements of astronomic­al bodies to keep time, maintain calendar and predict auspicious times for Vedic rituals.

When the couple, who are now separated, raised concerns about using numerologi­cal practices, Hilliam assured them it would help sell the property. After consulting his jyotishee, Hilliam emailed the couple an agency agreement in August 2016.

He gave specific instructio­ns that they should sign the agreement between 11am and 1.35pm on August

25 and sell the property on November

22 between 9.50am and 2.30pm. “It’s very important to sign during this period,” he wrote.

“It starts the energy flow for great things at sale time. Thank you for being open-minded to numerology. YOU WILL BE REWARDED.”

Hilliam did not recommend the couple take legal advice before signing the agreement, or provide a market appraisal or commission estimate.

In October that year, Hilliam recommende­d showing the property to developers on his database before bringing in Pourus Dumasia.

“[Hilliam] did not disclose to the complainan­ts that he had a preexistin­g relationsh­ip with Mr Dumasia, in that they both attended the same jyotishee.”

Hilliam also failed to tell them he had previously acted as a real-estate agent for Dumasia and been “financiall­y involved” in his other property developmen­ts, injecting hundreds of thousands of dollars towards the projects.

Hilliam drafted a sale agreement with Dumasia’s company, Franklin Wiz Ltd, conditiona­l on Dumasia obtaining consent to subdivide the Waiuku property. It was signed on November 21, 2016. The purchase price was $850,000.

The property was never exposed to other agents or advertised on the open market, the decision says.

Despite the contract going unconditio­nal in February 2017, it would be more than a year before the couple received any money upon settlement due to delays in Dumasia applying for consent.

Hilliam later agreed the sale agreement had been “structured to suit [Dumasia]”.

The decision also reveals that Hilliam loaned Dumasia $40,000 to fund his resource-consent applicatio­n. In return, a written agreement gave Hilliam the right to purchase one of the yet-to-be subdivided lots.

He also wound up marketing the subdivided properties after signing a listing agreement with Dumasia, before the initial deal had even settled.

Again, Hilliam failed to disclose any of this to his clients or get their consent to obtain an interest in the property.

Dumasia eventually paid the $30,000 deposit using money loaned to him by Hilliam, who deducted his commission from the same money.

The couple lodged a complaint with the Real Estate Authority (REA) in December 2017, after telling Hilliam his role “was to work for the vendor, not the purchaser”.

In her letter of complaint, Herbst said she had endured huge stress and legal bills trying to resolve the saga and suggested compensati­on was in order.

REA prosecutor M Mortimer said Hilliam had breached the Real Estate Agents Act by marketing the property without a listing agreement and failing to provide a market analysis or estimates.

He also failed to recommend the vendors seek legal advice and did not disclose his long-standing business relationsh­ip with the purchaser, or his own commercial interests in the property. Further, Hilliam had structured the sale agreement to suit the purchaser and signed an agreement to buy a subdivided lot , while acting for the vendors, without their knowledge or consent.

Suspension and a significan­t fine were necessary to reflect Hilliam’s extensive breaches of his profession­al obligation­s, Mortimer said.

Through his lawyer Tim Rea, “Mr Hilliam accepted that there were fundamenta­l failings in the real estate services he provided to the complainan­ts, amounting to serious negligence”.

The tribunal found Hilliam guilty of misconduct and unsatisfac­tory conduct, censured and fined him $4000. He was ordered to provide a written apology to the complainan­ts and pay them $10,000 compensati­on.

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David Hilliam

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