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Agency PracticeAgency Agreementslevel4EASY

Which type of agency agreement allows a real estate agent to represent both the vendor and purchaser in the same transaction?

Correct Answer

C) Dual agency agreement

A dual agency agreement specifically allows an agent to represent both parties in a transaction, though this requires full disclosure and informed consent from both parties. This arrangement must be carefully managed to avoid conflicts of interest.

Answer Options
A
Sole agency agreement
B
General agency agreement
C
Dual agency agreement
D
Exclusive agency agreement

Why This Is the Correct Answer

A dual agency agreement is specifically designed to allow one real estate agent to represent both the vendor and purchaser in the same transaction. Under the Real Estate Agents Act 2008, this arrangement is permitted but requires full disclosure to both parties and their informed written consent. The agent must manage potential conflicts of interest carefully and ensure both parties understand the implications of dual representation before proceeding.

Why the Other Options Are Wrong

Option A: Sole agency agreement

A sole agency agreement gives one agent exclusive rights to market a property for the vendor only. It does not permit the agent to also represent the purchaser in the same transaction. This is a single-party representation arrangement focused solely on the vendor's interests.

Option B: General agency agreement

A general agency agreement typically refers to a non-exclusive arrangement where the vendor can engage multiple agents to market their property. It relates to the vendor's representation only and does not authorize representing both parties in a transaction.

Option D: Exclusive agency agreement

An exclusive agency agreement gives one agent sole rights to market a property, but the vendor retains the right to sell privately without paying commission. Like sole agency, this only covers vendor representation and does not permit dual representation of both parties.

Deep Analysis of This Agency Practice Question

This question tests understanding of different agency relationships in New Zealand real estate practice. Agency agreements define the legal relationship between agents and their clients, establishing duties, obligations, and scope of representation. Dual agency is a specific arrangement where one agent represents both vendor and purchaser in the same transaction, creating potential conflicts of interest that must be carefully managed. Under the Real Estate Agents Act 2008, agents have fiduciary duties to their clients including loyalty, confidentiality, and acting in their best interests. When representing both parties, these duties can conflict, requiring full disclosure, informed consent, and careful management to ensure neither party is disadvantaged. This concept is fundamental to understanding professional obligations and ethical practice in real estate.

Background Knowledge for Agency Practice

Agency agreements in New Zealand real estate are governed by the Real Estate Agents Act 2008 and establish the legal relationship between agents and clients. Key types include sole agency (exclusive vendor representation), general agency (non-exclusive vendor representation), exclusive agency (exclusive with vendor's private sale rights), and dual agency (representing both parties). Dual agency requires special disclosure and consent procedures due to potential conflicts of interest. Agents owe fiduciary duties including loyalty, confidentiality, skill and care, and accounting to their clients.

Memory Technique

Remember DUAL agency with: D-Double representation, U-Unanimous consent required, A-Agent serves All parties, L-Legal disclosure mandatory. Think of an agent standing in the middle with one hand reaching toward the vendor and one toward the purchaser - they're serving DUAL masters.

When you see questions about representing both parties in a transaction, immediately think 'DUAL' and recall that only dual agency agreements permit this arrangement with proper disclosure and consent requirements.

Exam Tip for Agency Practice

Look for keywords like 'both parties,' 'vendor and purchaser,' or 'represent all parties' in questions about agency types. Only dual agency permits representing both sides of a transaction.

Real World Application in Agency Practice

An agent lists a property under a dual agency agreement. A buyer approaches the same agent wanting representation to purchase that exact property. The agent can legally represent both parties but must immediately disclose the dual agency situation to both vendor and purchaser, obtain written informed consent from each party, and carefully manage any conflicts of interest throughout the transaction to ensure neither party is disadvantaged.

Common Mistakes to Avoid on Agency Practice Questions

  • Confusing sole agency with dual agency - sole only represents the vendor
  • Thinking any agency agreement allows dual representation without specific consent
  • Forgetting that dual agency requires mandatory disclosure and written consent from both parties

Related Topics & Key Terms

Key Terms:

dual agencyvendor and purchaserboth partiesdisclosureinformed consent
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