I am planning on selling my points privately to my friends who want to add on
Does anyone have a sample contract?
I've got some things by searching but some of the posts are older.
I do plan on calling dvc and make sure I have what they need.
Thank You
Todd
So don't price it too low or Disney will take it.I'm not positive if they still have them listed but they used to have a document or two that was necessary for transferring listed on the member website. You do have to submit it for ROFR too.
If you planned on giving your friend a discount, perhaps best to sell it to your friend for market price and then give them a nice monetary gift after the sale completes..........So don't price it too low or Disney will take it.
I don't think you can do that. It would be illegal.If you planned on giving your friend a discount, perhaps best to sell it to your friend for market price and then give them a nice monetary gift after the sale completes..........
I am planning on selling my points privately to my friends who want to add on
Does anyone have a sample contract?
I've got some things by searching but some of the posts are older.
I do plan on calling dvc and make sure I have what they need.
Thank You
Todd
We are considering buying a contract from a family member is there anyway we could retain their contract privileges. Is there a difference when purchased from a family member? I'm assuming it still has to go ROFR.
TIA
I'm not positive if they still have them listed but they used to have a document or two that was necessary for transferring listed on the member website. You do have to submit it for ROFR too.
So don't price it too low or Disney will take it.
If you planned on giving your friend a discount, perhaps best to sell it to your friend for market price and then give them a nice monetary gift after the sale completes..........
Exactly.I don't know about the legality of any 'side agreements,' though I suspect they are in violation of some law, and Deb & Bill said. But then, who is to really know, in order to enforce that.
Wondering if you completed sale privately? If so, where did you obtain contract info? Did you use an attorney and title company? Thanks, We’re possibly doing the same thing.I am planning on selling my points privately to my friends who want to add on
Does anyone have a sample contract?
I've got some things by searching but some of the posts are older.
I do plan on calling dvc and make sure I have what they need.
Thank You
Todd
If close family member like parent or grandparent, have them add you to their contract, then you retain their benefits. I am going to add my kids to my contract in the next year - but I am keeping my name on the contract. I will eventually gift one of the contracts to my kids, but that will be a few years down the road.We are considering buying a contract from a family member is there anyway we could retain their contract privileges. Is there a difference when purchased from a family member? I'm assuming it still has to go ROFR.
TIA
I don't think you can do that. It would be illegal.
I don't know about the legality of any 'side agreements,' though I suspect they are in violation of some law, as Deb & Bill said. But then, who is to really know, in order to enforce that.
This thread is four years old, so if the person you quote doesn’t respond, that could be the reason.Wondering if you completed sale privately? If so, where did you obtain contract info? Did you use an attorney and title company? Thanks, We’re possibly doing the same thing.
Let's be clear, while it may be a shocker to some of us, Disney does not make laws. The ROFR provisions of the DVC contracts indicates the full terms of the deal should be included and thus if there are terms directly connected to the sale they should be included in ROFR. Failing to do this is not breaking the law, it's breaking the terms of the contract which could give DVC grounds to invalidate the contract.
How about offering your friends a very generous commission or finders fees for finding the buyer of the contract? The benefit is that then if DVC exercises, they still have to pay the commission.
I would personally reach out to one of the reputable closing companies talked about at length on this board. They handle the full process OTHER THAN the sales contract. The folks at the DVC Store who posted above are also well known and if they offer a cost effective option just to document, that also seems like a reasonable approach. While it's not impossible to do alone, someone will have to deal with all the deed filing formalities which are quite pedantic.
Let's be clear, you're talking about something completely different from what was discussed here. Breach of contract is absolutely not a violation of civil law; it is not "illegal" to breach a contract and a court's ability to adjudicate a contract and award some form of remedy does not make it a crime. It's contract law 101 that one should in fact breach a contract when the economic terms (including the potential remedy for breach) are no longer justified. You're confusing two concepts.Let's be clear, violating a contract between two private parties is a violation of civil law - which is why you can sue and go to court. In some cases, it may cross into criminal law as fraud - which is why you can get prosecuted ala Billy McFarland.