redress schemes
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Latest property news
Letting agents in big London borough hit with £430,000 fines
Agents in Tower Hamlets landed with huge fines for illegal fees and failing to sign up to redress scheme.
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Features
Is the customer always right?
Redress schemes exist to safeguard consumer rights, but, says Joanne Christie, the agent is not, you’ll be pleased to hear, always in the wrong.
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Latest property news
‘Do I really have to join one of the redress schemes?’
Confusion among sales and letting agents about who has to register with one of the three redress schemes has prompted the National Trading Standards Estate Agency Team (NTSEAT) to issue new advice. Team leader James Munro says that although it is already a legal requirement for anyone engaged in residential estate agency to be a member of an approved scheme, he says there have been requests to “clarify” what this means. It might seem an easy enough definition to grasp, but the subtleties of the sector have led several agents to wonder if they really have to join one of the schemes, which are Ombudsman Services: Property, the Property Redress Scheme and The Property Ombudsman. James says the NTSEAT now wants to make it clear that the definition covers any agency that ‘engages in estate agency work’ and ‘deals in residential property’ and that by residential he means ‘land that consists of or includes part of a building’. The list of questions that agents have asked include whether they have to join if they only sell off-plan property (they do) and if individual members of staff have to join a redress scheme (they don’t, only the company they work for has to). Also,…
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Features
Are redress schemes working?
The ‘regulation lite’ system brought in by the Government for sales and lettings agents got cheers all round in 2014. But does it still deliver? Nigel Lewis reports.
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Regulation & Law
Righting the wrongs
When a vendor was recently advised by the estate agent to reduce his asking price and complete additional works on the property, it seemed like sound advice to speed up the sale of his property, especially as the house went under offer just a few days later. But when it materialised that the buyer was actually a member of staff at the estate agency, the seller issued a complaint to the Ombudsman Services on the grounds that the company had failed to disclose this conflict of interest, which may have influenced the negotiation. “In the small number of cases where people have complaints these should be addressed quickly and effectively.” Brandon Lewis, Minsiter for Housing & Planning The estate agent maintained that it sold the property to the highest bidder. It also stated that the complainant was aware of the conflict in interest. However, upon investigation, the Ombudsman Services could find no evidence to show that the conflict of interest was disclosed to the complainant (the vendor) in writing, which is a legal requirement, in accordance with the Estate Agents Act. Following its failure to follow the rules, Ombudsman Services ordered the company to reduce their commission for selling the…
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