ACQUISITIONS OFFICER. Authorized Signature Date: Print Name: Title: E-mail address: Company: Address: Address: City: State: Zip: Phone: ANALYST OR OTHER REQUESTED RECIPIENT: ANALYST OR OTHER REQUESTED RECIPIENT: Print Name: Print Name: Title: Title Phone: Phone:
ACQUISITIONS OFFICER. Authorized Signature Date: Print Name: Title: E-mail address: Company: Address: Address: City: State: Zip: Phone: ANALYST OR OTHER REQUESTED RECIPIENT: ANALYST OR OTHER REQUESTED RECIPIENT: Print Name: Print Name: Title: Title Phone: Phone: Email: Email: South Carolina Disclosure of Real Estate Brokerage Relationships Pursuant to South Carolina Real Estate License Law in S.C. Code of Laws Section 00-00-000, a real estate licensee is required to provide you a meaningful explanation of agency relationships offered by the licensee’s brokerage firm. This must be done at the first practical opportunity when you and the licensee have substantive contact. Before you begin to work with a real estate licensee, it is important for you to know the difference between a broker- in-charge and associated licensees. The broker-in-charge is the person in charge of a real estate brokerage firm. Associated licensees may work only through a broker-in-charge. In other words, when you choose to work with any real estate licensee, your business relationship is legally with the brokerage firm and not with the associated licensee. A real estate brokerage firm and its associated licensees can provide buyers and sellers valuable real estate services, whether in the form of basic customer services, or through client-level agency representation. The services you can expect will depend upon the legal relationship you establish with the brokerage firm. It is important for you to discuss the following information with the real estate licensee and agree on whether in your business relationship you will be a customer or a client. You are a Customer of the Brokerage Firm South Carolina license law defines customers as buyers or sellers who choose NOT to establish an agency relationship. The law requires real estate licensees to perform the following basic duties when dealing with any real estate buyer or seller as customers: present all offers in a timely manner, account for money or other property received on your behalf, provide an explanation of the scope of services to be provided, be fair and honest and provide accurate information, provide limited confidentiality, and disclose “material adverse facts” about the property or the transaction which are within the licensee’s knowledge. Unless or until you enter into a written agreement with the brokerage firm for agency representation, you are considered a “customer” of the brokerage firm, and the brokerage firm will not act as your agent....