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Boatbuying: How Not To Get Ripped Off While most yacht brokers are reputable, a run-in with one of the few bad apples can make you lose your faith in humanity. Heres how to navigate through the buy/sell process without running aground. Most boats, especially those longer than 35 feet, are sold through yacht brokers. Therefore, dealing with a member of this profession is a strong likelihood, whether you plan on being a buyer or a seller. Before we dive into the shenanigans you may encounter in the world of yacht brokering, its important to review the traditional elements of buying or selling a boat and the role of the broker. The brokers role probably begins long before youre ready to seal a deal for a yacht. If you are a seller, you probably contacted the broker and listed your boat. When you list a boat, you usually sign a contract, too, promising the broker a commission of at most 10% if he is successful. Commissions vary from region to region and many sellers attempt to structure the commission to achieve particular goals. For example, if a broker sells the yacht sooner rather than later, he gets a larger commission.
If youre a buyer, your first contact with a broker is probably when you contact one to show you boats for sale that conform with your particular desires. So from the buyers perspective, this first stage can be called the shopping period. The next stage is the negotiating period, in which a buyer has homed in on the boat he wants. At that time, he (perhaps through his own broker, if he has his own, as opposed to the sellers broker), will make an offer for the vessel to the buyer. In keeping with tradition, a little respectful haggling usually ensues. And after a few counteroffers, the parties try to nail down a mutually agreeable number. Next comes the contract period. After a number is agreed upon, the buyer and seller generally execute a conditional sales agreement. It is conditional, of course, because the buyer still needs to see the yacht perform (the sea trial) and still needs to have it surveyed. If it fails the survey or fails to make it out of the slip, the deals off. After all, during the shopping period, the buyer knows scarcely anything more than the make, model, specs, condition and interior until a professional surveys the vessel and the buyer sees it sailing or motoring. The survey and sea trial will make or break the deal. Assuming that all goes well, the buyer gets out his checkbook and the seller hands over his pink slip (an anachronism, since yacht titles are rarely pink these days). The broker who made this deal possible usually gets paid a 10% or smaller commission. Often, the sellers broker will have to share that commission with the buyers broker if one was present and helped close the deal. When we say that you need to protect yourself from boat brokers, we dont want to alarm you by giving you the impression that yacht brokers are an unscrupulous gang. In fact, the opposite is probably true. According to Bob Badger, a state investigator who handles consumer claims made against Florida brokers, a scant 12 yacht brokers have lost their licenses since Florida started requiring licensure in 1988. That is an average of one expulsion per year out of a pool of over 2,200 brokers. Yacht Brokers are a pretty aboveboard bunch, said Bob, (who warned us not to call him Mr. Badger). But there are exceptions, Bob admits. And some, like the California broker who absconded with a buyers deposit and camped out in the Caymans, are egregious. No doubt, examples of misconduct like that one provided the fuel for the fire that drove Florida and California lawmakers to regulate yacht brokerage in their states. In fact, California and Florida are the only two states that seriously regulate brokers, and the majority of brokers nationwide work or are licensed in one or both states. Its from the stories of deals gone awry and brokers gone bad that we can learn how to protect ourselves when were buying and selling vessels. Broker malfeasance, which is a fancy word for bad or illegal behavior, generally falls into four categories: fraud, negligence, conflicts of interest, and financial irregularities. Here are some examples of each: Financial Irregularities Unfortunately, it does not always work this way. And since buyers and sellers often never meetworking instead through the broker via phone from different parts or the worldtheres constant potential for mischief. In one case, a federal court found that there was strong evidence a Florida broker concealed information from both parties in a boat closing that was conducted by mail. By telling the buyer that a seller was willing to part with his yacht for $850,000 when the figure was really $775,000, the broker hoped to secure a larger commission. The only problem was he didnt tell either party what he was doing. The broker presumably felt his action was necessary because the seller put his commission in doubt when he threatened to deduct from the originally agreed 10% fee any sum less than the original asking price of $895,000. At $775,000, the broker would have only earned $25,000, according to court documents. Your broker will also expect to make a profit. Therefore, as a seller, when youre in the beginning of the process and making arrangements with a yacht broker, realize that hes providing you a service and deserves to make a profit. (For more information on what hes doing to deserve this profit, see the sidebar titled Benefits of Brokers.) In this case, another factor may have contributed to the brokers ploy. He was apparently strapped for cash and needed the deal. Its another good lesson. Since empty stomachs rarely have the effect of making people more scrupulous, buyers and sellers would always be wiser to pick established and successful brokers to represent them. They dont have to be the best in town, but you should investigate a brokers reputation before doing business with him if he is, say, operating from the trunk of his car... Florida, where about half of the nations yacht brokers are registered, makes checking up on brokers easy, said Bob Badger. The Department of Business and Professional Regulation will tell you on the phone if your broker is in good standing, has a license, and if there are any noteworthy violations in the state. You can call them at 850/488-1636 or use their database on the web at http://www.myfloria.com/. Select the Yacht brokers category. Another taboo practice among brokers is double dipping, when brokers get commissions from both parties. Thats what happened to Bruce Frey, a Chicago real estate developer who listed his $5.6 million, 127-foot high-speed motor yacht with Fraser Yachts. A federal court found that the Florida yacht broker was getting paid by both the buyer and seller, although they didnt know it until it was too late.
The court ruled that a broker cannot act as agent for both buyer and seller because dual agency violates a brokers fiduciary duty and his duty of loyalty. According to the court, perhaps the most important component of the duty of loyalty is a brokers legal obligation to inform [his principle] with fairness, promptness, and completeness concerning all facts within his knowledge which are, or may be, material to the situation in connection with his employment. When a broker represents both the buyer and seller at the same time, he often ends up forfeiting his commission. Of course, thats only when they dont tell you. The last irregularity worth noting is a trust account violation. Thats when brokers either intentionally or accidentally take your money, which is supposed to go in escrow awaiting a closing, and put it in a different accounttheirs, for example. And in rare cases, once its in their bank account, both the broker and your money disappears. In one case, BoatU.S. recently recognized one of its own claims adjusters, Ahmad Turner, for his work in exposing a broker who failed to transfer funds from a sale into the sellers account. The seller retrieved his boat without telling the broker and the buyer reported the boat stolen. The broker who had been handling the transaction, wrote BoatU.S., seemed mysteriously aloof. After investigating, Turner found that the brokerin an attempt to manipulate taxeshad never paid the previous owner nor had he registered the boat to its new owner. That is not very common however, said Eddie Chavez, Associate Boating Administrator for the California Department of Boating and Waterways. Chavez said that the most common dispute over money is when deals fall through, and brokers and would-be buyers disagree as to whether a deposit was refundable. Sometimes buyers dont know that they are putting money down that they dont get back. Fraud On the one hand, a good surveyor should pick up where a broker leaves off. (And Practical Sailor cant say enough about the importance of picking a good surveyor.) Yet that doesnt always happen, sometimes leaving buyers disappointed. Deanna DeHaas of Annapolis had choice words for her broker (and surveyor) when her new sloop, represented to be bone dry and so dry, that the bilge is usually empty, turned out to be as wet as an April shower. More fittingly, it was as wet as the ocean. The broker wasnt exactly straight with us and our surveyor missed a hairline crack near the keel, probably caused by a hard grounding on rock or coral, she said. Had she not been otherwise satisfied, she said she might have sued. It doesnt hurt to be skeptical of over-enthusiatic, too-good-to-be-true pitches by brokers, just as you would be at the car dealership, or at the real-estate agents office. Brokers want to make a sale, and the first step is to grab your interest and make you happy. Once again, make sure you employ the best surveyor available. The surveyor is your human reality check. Conflicts of Interest We heard one horror story in which a Florida broker, who had listed a Beneteau, prevailed upon a buyer to use a surveyor of the brokers choosing. The only problem, the broker and the surveyor were in cahoots. It was nt surprising then when the surveyor didnt find the spate of blisters looming under the bottom paint. Negligence According to U.S. law and international treaties, most freight requires a bill of lading, essentially a form that describes the contents of the package or packages and acts as the contract between the shipper and the carrier in case something happens to the cargo. The yacht broker missed one detail, however: When you fill out the bill of lading, you must put a value on the cargo, or the legal default is $500. The broker had the yacht shrink-wrapped and loaded on the deck of a freighter bound for Sri Lanka. All was well until the freighters crew hooked up the yacht to a steel boom more than a hundred feet over the waterand dropped it. It landed, hard, on the freighters steel rail, bounced off the ship and sank nearby, a total loss. The moral of the story? Dont entrust complicated tasks to your broker that fall outside the scope of his work. The yachts owner should have hired an admiralty attorney and a logistics company, not a yacht broker. Consult an Attorney In fact, buyers and sellers are less likely to become embroiled in trouble if they consult an attorney. The case with yachts is the same as the case with real estate: It never hurts to ask a trained legal professional to review your final paperwork and sales contracts before sealing a deal. A good broker can probably walk you through this process and fill out standard forms, but theres no substitute for the eyes of an attorney. Since a yacht may very well be the second largest asset you ever buy, the buying period is not the time to pinch pennies. One Florida lawyer told us that he saved a seller from untold hassles when he discovered that a sales contract for a sailboat was silent on warranty questions. It didnt specify the boat was being sold in as is condition. And since a boat is a moveable good, it comes under the uniform commercial code. That could have exposed the seller to a variety of traditional warranty claims, even after the sale, he said. If You Run Into Trouble Both states require brokers to post a surety bond or a letter of credit. In Florida, the sum required is $25,000. The states Yacht and Ship Brokers Act permits a person injured by the fraud, deceit, or willful negligence of any broker or salesperson or by the failure of any broker or salesperson [to] file an action for damages upon the respective bonds against the principals and the surety. In other words, if you have to sue, and you win, this money will go towards paying your judgment. Overall, yacht brokers are a reputable group with a proven track record for fair dealing and honesty. They have even opted to bind themselves voluntarily to an independent code of ethics (http://yachtbrokersusa.org/Revised/codeEthics.htm). But since prevention and foresight is so easy in this area, buyers and sellers would be wise to heed the above lessons.
Also With This Article
Contacts- Boat/US, 884 S. Pickett St., Alexandria, VA 22304; 703/461-2856, http://www.boatus.com/. The National Association of Marine Surveyors, 86 Windsor Gate Dr., North Hills, NY 11040; 800/822-6267, www.nams-cms.org/. Society of Accredited Marine Surveyors, 4163 Oxford Ave., Jacksonville, FL 32210; 800/344-9077; http://www.marinesurvey.org/.
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