Friday, March 30, 2012

FACT FRIDAY!!!


Top three ways to get sued in Real Estate


The top three items that get small-to-medium scale real estate investors in hot water are:

1.Contract Disputes

2.Negligence

3.Deceptive & Unfair Business Practices








1. Contract Disputes
All too many lawsuits arise from contracts that were poorly drafted or never drafted. Contracts are THE primary tools of a real estate investor's trade. I never fail to be amazed at how many deals are conducted based poor or no contracts. Some hints with regard to drafting contracts:

Free contracts are worth what you paid for them.

Good contracts are result of careful drafting, long experience (even if someone else's), and review by a qualified attorney. Using contracts straight out of a real estate course or off of the internet without careful modification is like bring a knife to a gunfight. If you are too cheap to have an experienced lawyer work on your contracts, you do not belong in the RE game.

The purpose of operating agreements (or partnership agreements, joint-venture agreements, bylaws, etc.) is to communicate with business partners while you are still on good terms. Once a disagreement arises, negotiating a solution is MUCH harder, even if the disagreement is perfectly reasonable and in good faith.

Operating agreements lay out the solutions to problems before a dispute occurs. Such agreements take a lot of time and thought to craft--they are expensive in terms of your time and money (to pay for others' time). Handshake partnerships are made at your peril and are often much more expensive in the long run.

Contracts with tenants, sellers, and buyers should be tilted in your favor, but not be grossly unfair. Contracts that are too one-sided will turn a court or jury against you, at a minimum. Never underestimate the role that perceptions play when dealing with other humans. If a court or jury thinks you are an SOB, no good will come of it.

Such perceptions are very often much more important than the law itself (remember the Mark Fuhrman trial, I mean, O.J. Simpson trial?). Also, if a contract is too one-sided, a court can explicitly refuse to enforce it as "unconscionable" or "shocking to the conscience of the court." By all means, tilt a contract to your advantage, but avoid grossly unfair terms.

Contracts should be understandable and reasonably simple. If one party can argue that they did not understand a contract, and a court agrees, the court can set aside or amend the contract. The more convoluted a contract or the less sophisticated the parties, the more likely that a court will set aside or amend it. Simple (yet thorough), easy-to-read contracts are much more likely to be enforced.

Before complicating a deal, be sure that the benefits justify the burdens. For example, do not use a land trust unless a land trust is truly called for. Most people do not understand trusts of any sort. Trusts complicate deals.

If a trust adds enough to a deal to justify the risk that arises from the extra complexity, by all means, use the trust. If you are using a trust because some guru said to do so, think twice, because the complexity created by the trust may outweigh any benefits it adds.




2. Negligence
Question: If a tenant trips and falls in a rental unit, is the landlord liable?

Answer: It depends. The legal theory of negligence determines whether the tenant can successfully sue the landlord. For the landlord to be negligent in most states, he must fail to meet his duty to care for the property in a reasonable manner and must have knowledge that there was a defect on the property.

What is "reasonably" required varies from state to state and jury to jury. A few pointers on negligence:

Learn your state's rules. For example, in Ohio, a landlord is not required to shovel the sidewalks in winter--but once he does shovel them, he must continue to do so. Other states have different rules in where shoveling snow, maintaining exterior lighting, responsibility for locks, etc. are concerned.

Find out what is required and in which areas landlords tend to stray. The rules are not necessarily intuitive or rational (e.g., landlords have been held responsible for dog bites inflicted by tenants' dogs).

Whether or not the landlord knew of a defect is crucial. For example, if the landlord didn't know that a tenant's lock was faulty, the landlord is unlikely to be held negligent if a criminal enters a unit as a result and causes damage.

A word of caution: Tenants will lie and claim they told the landlord about the lock. It is up to the landlord to document repair requests in a credible manner that will stand up in court. "He said/she said" is not good enough.

Many courts hold that a tenant need not prove actual knowledge by the landlord with respect to defects in common areas (e.g., broken lights in the parking lot). In these cases, the courts often hold that a landlord should know what's going on in common areas (also known as "constructive knowledge").

The landlord should regularly inspect common areas, accompanied by a credible witness and document what was found and what was done about it.




3. Deceptive & Unfair Business Practices
Every state has passed broad consumer protection laws that prohibit deceptive or unfair business practices. If a state attorney general goes after a real estate investor, the lawsuit is almost invariably based on these statutes. Some tips:

Deceptive: The term "deceptive" is extremely broad, especially when dealing with unsophisticated customers or complicated concepts (e.g., "creative" techniques). The best way to avoid issues with "deception" is to use a strong, straightforward and clear disclaimer when transacting business.

The disclaimer is basically a crystal-clear summary of a transaction and makes the risks and rewards to all parties clear. Such summaries/disclaimers are especially important when dealing with people who are under duress (e.g., in foreclosure), because an Attorney General will not hesitate to accuse an investor of taking advantage of a "poor victim who was in a bad way and didn't understand what they were signing."

In addition, strong and clear language should be used to explain transactions that involve non-standard techniques (e.g., taking properties subject to the deed) or lots of moving parts (e.g., anything involving trusts).

Unfair: In general, a transaction has to be very one-sided to be considered legally "unfair" but an angry judge or jury can and will nail an investor who strikes them as unscrupulous. Deals and documents should be tilted in an investor's favor whenever possible--but they should not be grossly one-sided. Two examples of practices that are bait for accusations of unfairness:

You buy a property subject to the deed and reserve the right to give it back if the deal goes south--basically, heads, I win, tails you lose. The benefit of a true purchase and sale is that the investor has a deed to the property and therefore complete control over it. The seller has given up the property.

In exchange for giving up all control and benefit associated with the property, the seller receives assurances that the problem property is completely off their hands--permanently.

Taking the benefit from the seller (that is, the deed) without relieving them of the corresponding burden (that is, the problem property) would strike many (myself included) as unfair. If you want an "out," try a sandwich lease-option. It's commonly understood that a tenant, unlike a purchaser, can bail on a lease when it expires.


When selling on lease option, some investors nullify the option for the smallest of defaults (e.g., you were a day late on paying). If the tenant/optionee paid a significant amount for the option or has built significant equity in the underlying property, a hair-trigger default (especially if the tenant/optionee was willing to cure the default) is prime meat for an accusation of "unfair business practices."

Bottom Line:
Know what gets investors sued and protect against such issues with reasonable, straightforward paperwork that sets forth rational terms in a clear and concise manner. That kind of documentation and business practice makes a lawsuit less likely and a victory more likely if a lawsuit does arise.


For any questions, please comment below. For investment services, leave a message at 314-246-9484 or you can email at dhibb99@gmail.com

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW WEDNESDAYS!!!

Words of Winners!

I've been in the business for little over eight years, and I've done almost 850 transactions. I'm very, very assertive. My specialty is communication--talking to homeowners and talking to banks.




So let's start with some embedded commands. Embedded commands are patterns of language that bypass conscious reasoning and speak directly to the subconscious mind. Embedded commands influence people at the subconscious level. This allows you to direct people to take specific actions.

They will also have specific thoughts and will generally do whatever it is you want them to do. The subconscious is in a constant search for patterns. One command is not a pattern. You have to bombard your customer with command after command after command.

Your brain is always analyzing what's going on around you. It's trying to find similar things from your past and trying to line them up. The subconscious mind has stored millions and millions of conversations with other human beings. These conversations have become so routine, that the mind has virtually fallen asleep.

Your subconscious mind runs on auto pilot. It's accustomed to remembering or responding to stuff day after day. Remember, the older you get, the more you think, "auto pilot heard this before." When using embedded commands correctly, you create unusual patterns of language that force the subconscious mind to wake up and pay attention.

Well what's the result? The subconscious has received a direct and specific command that it feels compelled to act on. What does this mean to you? Let me explain.

When you are in a normal, everyday conversation with investors, banks, and customers, you can influence them to sell this house, sign the deed, sign the contract, accept this offer, or whatever it is else you want them to do with absolutely no resistance.

How is there no resistance?
Remember embedded commands bypass conscious reasoning and speak directly to the subconscious level. Now, they simply begin to get it in their minds that they should do whatever it is you want them to do. Embedded commands are one to four word groups that order you to do something, and they make sense on their own.

Commands are like time bombs. When you use a command, you don't instantly see a reaction. When you say a command, you plant it in the subconscious mind, and it begins to grow into an action. Commands only work in massive quantities. Remember, the subconscious is looking for patterns. And one or two commands are not a pattern.





Examples of powerful embedded commands
Lets look at a few of these sentences that I wrote down. The first thing I say to homeowners when I get to their house is: "Usually my customers *do as I say*. Shall we *begin*?" Now, what's funny is to see their reaction to that. They always, 100% of the time say "Okay!" and start working with you.

Now, as you're walking from the front door, to the kitchen table, or into the living room, in their minds they're thinking: "Did he just say I had to do what he said?" It's very, very powerful language patterns.

Another one: "If you don't practice this daily, you will bumble and stumble when it comes time for your presentation. Don't you agree? If you don't (down-swing) *practice this daily*, you will bumble and stumble when it comes time for your presentation. (down swing) Don't you agree?"

Now, we didn't say: (up-swing) "Don't you agree?" We said, (down-swing) "Don't you agree?" We pulled down on the "agree." It sounds more commanding. You're basically telling them what the answer is: "Yes, you do agree." *Practice this daily* is the embedded command.

Let's look at another one: "You should work with me, so I can help you get what you want." *Work with me* is the command. Another one: "You must take notes while I'm speaking. You will learn so much more. Shall we do that now?" *Take notes* is the embedded command.

Another one: "You can begin to relax now that you are here." *Relax* is the embedded command. Another one: "You need to think deeply about what you're saying." *Think deeply* is the embedded command.

And the last one: "I don't know when you'll (pause) feel motivated. I don't know when you'll (pause) feel motivated. (pause) You have to (pause) trust your feelings (pause) and make that decision."

Now let's put "begin" in there. Lets put a presupposition in there. "I don't know when you'll "begin" to (pause) feel motivated. (pause) You have to (pause) trust your feelings and (pause) make that decision."

Use powerful language patterns and assumptions
Now, can you see how much stronger these language patterns are than what you're using? A lot of people, when they do short sales, call up the bank and say "Do you do short sales?" Don't ever do that--ever. Here's how you handle it. "Hi my name is Bob. I've done a short sale package on 123 Elm St. Here's the loan #. Can you pull the file up quick?"

And they'll pull up the file. "Where do I need to fax my short sale package, so you can go ahead and get this approved?" Now, hear the assumptions in there? "Where do I need to fax my short sale package?" It's not "Do you do short sales?" Now, I'massuming their going to approve it. Okay? Hear the language patterns here? This step, guys and gals, is so incredibly important.





I have a program called Secrets of Closing the Deal. It's an NLP program, and it's exactly what we're talking about here. Let's look at another one: "Unless you feel motivated, you'll never decide to work with me, which means you'll never get out of your situation, and that's not what you want. Is it?"

Hear how demanding that sounds and how assumptive that sounds? Let me tell you something; analogical marking is four things, in embedded commands:

Pausing before the embedded command

Going louder on the embedded command

Down-swinging on the embedded command

Pausing after the embedded command

So let's read it again: "Unless you *feel motivated*, you will never decide to *work with me*, which means you'll never get out of your situation, and that's not what you want. Is it?"

"Unless you *(down-swing) feel motivated*, you'll never decide to *(down-swing) work with me*, which means you'll *(down-swing) never* get out of your situation, and that's not what you (down-swing) want. (down-swing) Is it?"

See how much stronger that is? What I want you to do is get strong with your language patterns, and get strong with how you talk to homeowners and banks and how you talk to other investors. Remember, great sales people assume everything. Perception is reality. If they think you have power, you do. If they think you're an imposter, they're correct.

Do the homework, get the edge
Start writing down some of these embedded commands. Now, you know what's funny? Only 10% of you are going to do this. You know what? This is work. However, that 10% will out-produce the other 90% guaranteed. Let me give you some embedded commands.

Sign the contract

Trust me

Accept this offer

Work with me

Sell this house

Decide now

Act now

Do what I say

Do as I say

Feel motivated

Get excited

Take action

Agree with me

Convince yourself

Believe me

Extend the agreement

Come to my office

Sign this now

Listen to me

Accept less

Take notes

There are all kinds of them. Now, write these sentences down that you've created. Get them down to where you know exactly how to say them. When you figure out exactly how to say them, you can figure out how your customer is reacting to them.

I want you to say those sentences fifty times a day as fast as you can. When the customer says something, you know how to react to it. When the homeowner says, "You know what? Why should I deed my house to you?" Bam! You have the answer for it. You have something so much stronger in your arsenal. I hope you have learned something.

For any questions, please comment below. For investment services, leave a message at 314-246-9484 or you can email at dhibb99@gmail.com

Monday, March 26, 2012

Main Question of The Day MONDAY!

What is Your Exit Strategy?

I know a fireman who once told me that it's not safe to enter a burning building without first knowing where all the exits are. It seems like common sense to me. Does it to you?

The same thinking applies to the real estate business. Before you buy any property, you must first decide on your exit strategy. In fact, you should decide on your exit strategy before you make your offer. It should drive your offer.

In other words, when you know what you will do with the property, it will help you determine the offer(s) you should make and the financing source (if any) you should use.

This exit strategy would also require short-term financing. I say short term because you'll be in and out of the deal in less than six months. Good sources for this type of financing would be:

· Hard money

· A partner who wants to split the profit

· A private lender who's okay with a short-term loan

· Your credit

· Your home equity, or

· Your own cash

Remember this about your credit, home equity, and cash. Never tie it up for more than six months. If you do, you limit your ability to move quickly. You reduce your liquidity.

Your exit strategy determines where you'll buy

Here's another consideration when you choose to retail the house. It must be in a neighborhood where "A" credit buyers are buying! If it's in a neighborhood where "A" buyers are not buying--retailing is not a viable exit strategy.

It's the "A" buyer that's got "A" credit and can get the new, high loan-to-value financing that will cash you out. That's the essence of retailing--cashing out. If the house is in a neighborhood where "A" buyers are not buying, then you need to choose another exit strategy.

How will you know? Ask a Realtor. Another clue is if there's an absolute absence of Realtor signs in front yards, but there are F.S.B.O. signs. Realtors generally don't list houses that aren't going to sell to "A" buyers because in order for them to get paid, the buyer needs to cash the seller out.

Lease options can be sweet!

Or suppose your exit strategy is to sell it on lease option. This will require you to line up long-term financing going in. If the seller is willing to "be the bank" and hold a note, and it's obviously very desirable that they do, then you might be willing to pay a little more for the house.

In fact, if the seller is willing to carry back zero interest financing, you might be willing to pay a good bit more for the property. This is my favorite way to buy--bar none. (As an aside, a great ad to attract this type of seller goes something like this: "I'll pay your price if you'll sell on my terms." It works! Try it.)

When your exit strategy is "buy and hold"

If your exit strategy is not to exit, but rather to rent the house and hold it long term, that's fine too. But here are a couple of considerations. One, your financing needs to be long term. My humble opinion is that private lenders with a long-term time horizon are far better than going to the bank.

No matter what the current rates are, a private lender is always better for limiting liability, flexibility of terms, and helping people in general.

Did you know that when you borrow a private lender's money, you are helping that person. You are providing them with an investment vehicle that is probably not available to them otherwise and presumably at a rate higher than they can earn anywhere else. It's true.

And if you're like me and make helping people a priority in life, then there's one more reason to use private lenders.

In this scenario, no balloon payment is most desirable. Balloon payments seem okay going in, but when they pop, and you're forced to refinance or sell, it adds stress to your life that you really don't need. So go for no balloon or a LONG term balloon (like 7 - 15 years) if at all.

One last thing about renting property...

Decide to use a professional property manager from the "get go." Managing them yourself is the fastest way to being miserable that I know, and I do know.

Oh, and if you think a property manager will cost you money, then you don't get it. You need to rethink the benefits. If you think that a property manager will cost you money, then you probably also think an accountant will cost you money. DUH!

So know your exit strategy before you even make the offer and be sure it's a viable one. Then line up the financing that the exit strategy requires, then do the deal!

For any questions, please comment below. For investment services, leave a message at 314-246-9484 or you can email at dhibb99@gmail.com

Friday, March 23, 2012

FACT FRIDAY!!!


Protect Yourself from Real Estate Scams 10 tips

1. Join your REIA and ask your leaders. Your local real estate investment group should have resources where you can ask for advice when something seems "fishy" or "too good to be true."

2. Ask for I.D. When you are dealing with a seller whom you've never met, and the home is vacant, ask for the seller's I.D. Some scammers pretend to own vacant houses and trade deeds for money.

3. Always place your deposit in your closing agent's escrow account. That says it all. If the deal goes sour, you're not chasing your money.


4. Your own attorney reviews all deals. Make sure your own attorney or closing agent represents you in every transaction.

5.Check city liens. Always visit the local governmental agencies to find out about pending liens that may not show up on the title search. This can save you thousands. Ask us how we know.

6Title Insurance--even for flips. If your name goes into the "chain of title," purchase title insurance. You only need one deal to go sour to pay for a lifetime of title insurance policies

6Title Insurance--even for flips. If your name goes into the "chain of title," purchase title insurance. You only need one deal to go sour to pay for a lifetime of title insurance policies.

7.Run your own comps and drive by the comps given you. Obtain comparable sales reports from your own sources when you are not sure of the area's value. Drive by each comp to make sure you are making a wise investment.

8.Stay in control of your deal. Don"t be intimidated by your seller. Protect yourself and stand up for your rights in the contract.

9.Use your own mortgage brokers or money sources. Make these contacts before your first deal, so you are not pushed into using a money source you don't know. Rushing to get financing can be costly.

10.Contingencies can protect. If you feel uneasy about the transaction, be sure to use a contingency in the contract. A contingency is a clause that binds the seller, but gives the buyer the right to cancel within a certain period of time.

Hope we didn't scare you too much. We practice these tips each time we do a deal, and we've learned many of these tips the hard way. Hopefully you won"t have to. This is a great business and we love it.

Bonus Tip #11: When you do make an honest contact, don't lose it. Build on it and grow from there.

For any questions, please comment below. For investment services, leave a message at 314-246-9484 or you can email at dhibb99@gmail.com