fixNflip,
Glad to meet you.
Every once in a awhile I like to post this to tell how it really is for Bird Dogs.
The local Real Estate Boards impose regulation relevant to the distribution or aid in distribution of a homestead with the intent to protect the consumer (and in some rare cases monopolize the marketplace).
Whether or not this legislation is put into place in a criminal or a civil context, it does appear fairly evident that the enforcement of this legislation would be limited to that of:
a) When a consumer is being blind-sided (ie: you are acting on his or her behalf without proper licensing and steering him/her wrong)
b) You are continuously taking a “fee” for selling real estate.
If you are working with an investor, and you are paid by the investor, who has experience in real estate transactions, and you are not party to that transaction (ie: a consultant) you should, (this is not to be construed as legal advice) be ok, for the following reasons:
-
You are taking a fee for selling information, not real estate (nobody can prevent you from charging $5.00 to tell him or her were the nearest gas station is, or where the nearest “deal” is)
-
Even if legislation was in place to protect the consumer, you have conducted no harm to the consumer…so in a semi-perfect world, you can indeed pay for a lead on a house!
I think it is important to know, most investors are opposed to the local Real Estate Boards attempting to corner the market on Buying/Selling properties, I am certainly of the opinion that the local Boards would like to see no investors/creative RE at all so that they can continue to take a small chunk out of every property sold and have the properties sold according to their “rules & regulations”.
There is also such a thing as a simple Partnership Agreement, thereby making you and the investor principals in the transaction. The Bird Dog is bought out of the Partnership by the investor, thereby violating no State Statute.
Also, your best deals do not come from realtors they come from networking with everyone you meet, passing out business cards, calling ad’s in the newpaper that say I Buy Houses and seeing what they need, etc…
When a realtor gets a super good deal it is called a “back pocket listing” and never sees the MLS, the property is sold to a list of folks the realtor has a repoir with or the realtor purchases the property and resells it themselves. I am not saying anything is wrong with this just real life.
Your can research a property without a realtor easily, as there are plenty of services out there that give you comps, owners names, mortgage information, plus much more.
John $Cash$ Locke