OK, let me try again. I'm going to get pretty basic so forgive me if I come across in a way I don't intend.
Your friend wants to sell you their
DVC points. You two need to produce a contract, it can be very simple, look back at your two previous ones when you bought before, I presume from a resale broker. All it needs to state is the parties, who's selling what to who and have signitures and the dates. Make sure all parties sign it. Divorces and the like can complicate matters signficantly. As it turns out there needs to be a selling price or value on this for the committee to consider it. Once you have the contract, just fax or send it to DVC Member Administration.
After that you wait up to 30 days to hear back from DVC. If they decide to excercise theri Right of First Refusal, they buy it and you're out of luck but your friend is in the same position he would be financially if you bought it. If they give their apporval, the deal can go through. That means that you would then need to have a deed prepared, signed, notarized and sent to Orange Co for recording with the proper fees. DVC would also need to get a copy of the deed to change the ownership over.
You and your friend should know that once a determination is made they will cancel any pending reservations regardless of who's name their in. You also need to be aware of the price unless you don't care if DVC buys it back. You could always put a price of $72-75 per point and then your friend could rebate back to you the difference in that and your agreed upon price. Obviously that's a little questionable but it's done all the time.
Your friend must be a member in good standing. That means not behind on any payments or fees. He will also have to pay it off at some point if there's a loan attached but I'm not sure at what point this has to happen for the deal to go forward. I'd assume the issue is important either when it's submitted to DVC or before they'll change the ownership.
As for getting the deed done, you could have a closing company do the entire thing just like with most resales through a broker or ask them to do as much or little as you need. A full closing will likely be close to $500, just deed and recording along with the signitures is around $280-300. Companies I'd consider are Voigt and Voigt, Sunbelt Title (I think they're still around), Holland and Knight, Timeshare Closing service and First
American. The latter 3 were recommended by DVC to me but I've used the first 2 and they were fine.
Does this answer your question better?