Northstar
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Sep 9, 2005
- Messages
- 2,004
Thanks Lisa. At this time, I don't think the seller has our earnest money. Base on ILL real estate law it should be held in an escrow account and neither party can get it unless the parties agree to release it. Our contract states, "Buyer shall serve Notice upon Seller or Seller's attorney of any defects disclosed by any inspection for which Buyer requests resolution by Seller, together with a copy of the pertinent pages of the inspection reports within 5 Business Days (this is our attorney's error because she served notice on the 6th day). If within 10 business day after the date of acceptance written agreement is not reached by the Parties with respect to resolution of all inspection issues, then either party may terminate this contract by serving Notice to the other Party, whereupon this contract should be null and void"
- Our contract states, "In every instance where this contract shall be deemed null and void or if this Contract may be terminated by either Party, the following shall be deemed incorporated 'and earnest money refunded to the Buyer upon written direction of the Parties to Escrowee or upon entry of an order by a court competent jurisdiction." Well we did sign the contract before giving them the earnest money actually we signed 2 contracts before issuing an earnest money check. One for our original offer and the second when she increased the purchase price.
Do you know whether THIS deadline was met... did your attorney inform them of your intention to terminate the contract (because of failure to agree on inspection-related repairs) by the 10th business day?
Because if he didn't, from their point of view, you are breaking the contract and they get to keep your earnest money.
After five business days and no inspection report issues, they were thinking "Hallelujah! The deal is done!" Then day 6... oops, no, lots of problems. The deal isn't looking so good to them now so they turn down your two proposals for repair, hoping you'll want the place bad enough to just bite the bullet and do the repairs yourself without financial penalty to them. 10 business days, they're holding their breath, it's your last chance to back out... Hallelujah! No word from you (assuming your attorney missed this deadline). The deal is done and they didn't have to reduce their price or make repairs!
A day or two or three later, suddenly your attorney says you want to back out of the contract. Well, now you don't have grounds for termination without penalty. They can keep the earnest money... that's what it's intended for, compensating them if the buyer isn't serious and wants to keep dancing around changing the deal.
So it's important for you to know if the attorney informed them of your intention to back out within the time limit of 10 days!
I still think it's your agent and attorney who are to blame and should compensate you for losing your earnest money.