World Wide Property Sales
Simultaneous Closings
by Lorelei Stevens
A simultaneous closing, sometimes called "table funding," is a transaction in
which the seller sells the property, carries a note, and then sells the note at
the same time the property sells, or within a very short time afterwards. This
type of transaction falls in a gray area of the law. It could be considered a
loan disguised as a sale.
The logic behind this questionable condition is that the seller never intended
to carry the note, and if we bought the note, we could be considered a lender
because we would be the first party to provide money.
If the transaction is judged a loan, the note broker and the note buyer could be
required to comply with all licensing and disclosure requirements of the law.
Failure to do so could result in severe penalties.If the transaction is judged a
loan, it could also be considered as a usurious loan, charging an illegally high
interest rate. This could also result in severe penalties.
Therfore, we only buy notes that are "old and cold," where we entered the
picture after the note was created and one or two months have gone by.
Bio:
Lorelei Stevens is president of Wall Street Brokers, Inc. in Seattle,
Washington. She has been a licensed real estate broker (Washington State Real
Estate Brokers License WA-LL-SB-*275LD) and a discounted note buyer since the
1970s. She has worked her entire adult life with Wall Street Brokers negotiating
millions of dollars of paper and is a nationally recognized expert.
Lorelei has taught Legal Continuing Education seminars and has written numerous
articles for legal, real estate and other professional publications on the
subjects of seller-financing, managing, reinforcing and buying paper. She is the
author of two books, one on seller-financing and another on note buying. She
also writes a monthly column for Noteworthy Newsletter and is a frequent
contributor to The Paper Source. Her web site is www.WallStreetBrokers.com.