needles
New Member
- Jurisdiction
- Washington
Recently, I had an agreement to sell an online asset using a third party broker. This broker inserted a clause into my listing without my knowledge or consent. This clause allows a potential buyer to back out of a deal if certain benchmarks aren't achieved.
I found a buyer and came to an agreement, which normally would result in a binding contract to complete the sale, according to the broker's terms of service. But the additional benchmarks in that extra clause were not satisfied, and the buyer will likely cancel the deal.
I question whether the clause inserted by the broker could be enforceable, when I didn't agree to it, or even know of its existence until the buyer submitted his offer. (This clause was evidently visible on my listing page all along, and I just didn't notice it. Even so, I never explicitly agreed to it.)
Nothing in the broker's terms of service appears to give them the right to add clauses or stipulations like this without the seller's consent. They did specifically ask me to approve other sections of the listing. But they never asked me to approve this clause.
I do not hold the prospective buyer responsible; he made the purchase with the understanding that the deal could be canceled under certain conditions, because that's what the listing said.
However, I wonder if the broker could owe me the full purchase price because, if not for the clause they added without my approval, this deal would have been final, and they would've been required to close the deal and send payment. Is there any case against the broker here? I'm in Washington state, broker is based in Florida.
I found a buyer and came to an agreement, which normally would result in a binding contract to complete the sale, according to the broker's terms of service. But the additional benchmarks in that extra clause were not satisfied, and the buyer will likely cancel the deal.
I question whether the clause inserted by the broker could be enforceable, when I didn't agree to it, or even know of its existence until the buyer submitted his offer. (This clause was evidently visible on my listing page all along, and I just didn't notice it. Even so, I never explicitly agreed to it.)
Nothing in the broker's terms of service appears to give them the right to add clauses or stipulations like this without the seller's consent. They did specifically ask me to approve other sections of the listing. But they never asked me to approve this clause.
I do not hold the prospective buyer responsible; he made the purchase with the understanding that the deal could be canceled under certain conditions, because that's what the listing said.
However, I wonder if the broker could owe me the full purchase price because, if not for the clause they added without my approval, this deal would have been final, and they would've been required to close the deal and send payment. Is there any case against the broker here? I'm in Washington state, broker is based in Florida.