The Real Estate Commission regrets to announce the passing of Commission Member and former Chairman Billie J. Mercer. During her six years’ service on the Commission, Billie was a tireless and dedicated worker, committed to improving and elevating real estate practice in our state. The members and staff of the Commission extend their sincere sympathy to her family and many friends.
This article came from the February 2002-Vol32-4 edition of the bulletin.
By Emmet R. Wood, Director, Audits and Investigations
The Commission is in the process of evaluating computer software for compliance with the Real Estate License Law, Commission rules and Trust Account Guidelines. In order to comply, the software must have the capability to generate a trust account journal, supplemental deposit and disbursement worksheets, ledger sheets, bank reconciliation and ledger reconciliation worksheet as required by Commission Rule A.0107 and as illustrated in the Trust Account Guidelines.
Once the Commission determines that the computer reports submitted by a vendor comply, the software is put on the Commission’s Compliant Software List. This list will be published in the Real Estate Bulletin and on the Commission’s web site at www.ncrec.state.nc.us. Users should be certain that they are using the current updated version of a compliant software.
Not all computer software programs are evaluated. For example, Quick Books would not be evaluated because the software is not set up or programmed to account for the handling of trust funds. This would not preclude a licensee from using that software to account for trust funds. However, someone using Quick Books would have to possess a good working knowledge of not only accounting but also the Commission’s reporting requirements and they would then have to set up the software to generate the appropriate compliant reports.
When a licensee does elect to use software on the Commission’s Compliant Software List, then the licensee should evaluate the software for its usefulness and utility to the real estate company. For example, if a licensee is in the long term rental management business, then the licensee may want the software to print a list of the tenants who are delinquent with their rent or a list of the rental units that are vacant.
Keep in mind that the reports generated by Commission compliant software are only as good as the data entered by the computer user who should have competence in accounting and possess a good working knowledge of the Commission’s rules and guidelines.
This article came from the February 2002-Vol32-4 edition of the bulletin.
SELBY G. BENTON (Warrenton) – The Commission accepted the voluntary surrender of Mr. Benton’s broker license for a period of one year effective March 1, 2001. The Commission dismissed without prejudice allegations that Mr. Benton violated provisions of the Real Estate License Law and Commission rules. Mr. Benton neither admitted nor denied any misconduct.
DOUGLAS R. BRINDLEY (Corolla) – By Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Mr. Brindley for a period of two years effective December 1, 2001. Three months of the suspension are to be active and remainder stayed for a probationary term ending December 1, 2004. The Commission found that Mr. Brindley, as broker-in-charge, failed for two years to conduct the monthly trust account reconciliation required by Commission rules and thus failed to properly account for funds held for others. The Commission noted that Mr. Brindley promptly undertook steps to remedy this situation.
CALLIHAN TEAL SKELLEY & ASSOCIATES, t/a ERA CALLIHAN, TEAL, SKELLEY (Calabash) – By Consent, the Commission revoked the firm broker license of Callihan Teal Skelley & Associates effective December 3, 2001. The Commission found that the firm continued to operate and renew its firm license every year despite the revocation of its Certificate of Authority in September 1993 by the Secretary of State’s office for failure to file annual reports. The Commission also found that the firm failed to perform monthly trust account reconciliation, failed to maintain property ledgers, engaged in commingling of funds and failed to properly account for the funds of others.
CENTURY 21 DOROTHY ESSEY & ASSOCIATES, INC. (Long Beach) – By Consent, the Commission reprimanded the firm of Century 21 Dorothy Essey & Associates effective December 1, 2001. The Commission found that Century 21 Dorothy Essey & Associates disbursed a $5,000 earnest money deposit without either a court order or written release by all parties to a failed contract to purchase property listed by the firm, even though the deposit was in dispute between the owner and prospective buyers. The firm reimbursed $2,500 to the owner under the terms of the listing agreement.
ALAN B. CONNER (Monroe) – By Consent, the Commission suspended the salesperson license of Mr. Conner for a period of two years effective January 1, 2002. Six months of the suspension are to be active and the remainder stayed for a probationary term ending July 1, 2004. The Commission found that Mr. Conner, without authority, signed an earnest money release form for the parties to a sales transaction. The Commission also found that Mr. Conner, upon receiving the disbursement check, endorsed and cashed the check without the authorization of the parties. Mr. Conner subsequently reimbursed the parties.
CROSSMAN COMMUNITIES OF NC, INC. (Calabash) – By Consent, the Commission reprimanded the firm of Crossman Communities effective December 1, 2001. The Commission found that Crossman Communities failed to perform monthly trust account reconciliations, failed to maintain property ledgers, engaged in commingling of funds and failed to properly account for the funds of others. These problems occurred in the Calabash office, which has since been closed.
ELMER DAVIS (Mebane) – By Consent, the Commission suspended the salesperson license of Mr. Davis for a period of one year effective October 1, 2001. Three months of the suspension are to be active and the remaining period stayed for a probationary term of one year. The Commission found that Mr. Davis, in brokering a sale of real property in which he had an ownership interest, failed to include upon the closing statement a note received for a portion of the purchase price and closing expenses.
TERESA ELLISON (Leicester) – By Consent, the Commission suspended the salesperson license of Ms. Ellison for a period of two years effective January 1, 2002. The Commission found that Ms. Ellison failed to disclose 1985 and 1987 convictions to the Commission on her license application and failed to notify the Commission of name and address changes.
DOROTHY H. ESSEY (Long Beach) – By Consent, the Commission reprimanded Dorothy Essey effective December 1, 2001. The Commission found that Dorothy Essey disbursed an earnest money deposit without either a court order or written release by all parties to a failed contract to purchase property listed by the firm, even though the deposit was in dispute between the owner and prospective buyers. Ms. Essey reimbursed $2,500 to the owner under the terms of the listing agreement.
LONNIE W. GLASPIE, JR. (Clinton) – By Consent, the Commission reprimanded Mr. Glaspie effective October 3, 2001. The Commission found that Mr. Glaspie, when purchasing property for his own account, concealed his acquisition of title from a lender in order to avoid enforcement of the due-on-sale clause in a deed of trust on the property.
JOHN MARK HANCOCK (Raleigh) – The Commission accepted the voluntary surrender of Mr. Hancock’s broker license for a period of one year effective October 15, 2001. The Commission dismissed without prejudice allegations that Mr. Hancock violated provisions of the Real Estate License Law and Commission rules. Mr. Hancock neither admitted nor denied any misconduct.
JW CONCEPTS LLC (Cary) – By Consent, the Commission revoked the firm broker license of JW Concepts effective January 1, 2002. The Commission found that JW Concepts failed to have its trust account records created and maintained in the manner required by Commission rules. Funds were expended from the account when not held for the purpose for which spent and were commingled with the funds held for others by the firm. The Commission noted that JW Concepts acted promptly to end commingling practices, rectify improper expenditures and implement the necessary record keeping system for the funds of others. J. W. Concepts neither admitted nor denied any misconduct.
PATRICIA A. KEYES (South Brunswick) – By Consent, the Commission reprimanded Ms. Keyes effective December 1, 2001. The Commission found that Ms. Keyes, acting as bookkeeper for the real estate firm where she also held a salesperson license, handled all of the rental business herself without the supervision of her broker-in-charge. The Commission also found that the firm’s books and records were not kept in compliance with the Real Estate License Law and the Commission rules.
THOMAS R. T. MCINTOSH (Durham) – By Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Mr. McIntosh for one year effective December 1, 2001, then stayed the suspension upon Mr. McIntosh’s satisfactory completion of certain coursework and placed him on probation until December 1, 2003. The Commission found that Mr. McIntosh in 1992 answered “no” to the broker license application question concerning prior convictions of any criminal offense when, in fact, he had been convicted in 1988 in Guilford Country, NC, of Driving While Impaired. The Commission also found that Mr. McIntosh sent the Commission checks to renew his license in 1995 and 2000, which were initially returned for insufficient funds. The Commission further found that in July 1999 the Appraiser Board suspended Mr. McIntosh’s appraiser license for three months for paying a course sponsor for a continuing education course with a check that was returned for insufficient funds.
NORTH CAROLINA REAL ESTATE SERVICES, CORP. (Clinton) – By Consent, the Commission reprimanded North Carolina Real Estate Services, Corp., effective October 3, 2001. The Commission found that the firm, while managing property owned by its principal shareholder, concealed from a lender having a deed of trust on the property the transfer of title to real property of the owner of the firm in violation of a due-on-sale clause contained in the lender’s deed of trust.
MICHAEL G. SCHRIBER (Pinehurst) – By Consent, the Commission reprimanded Mr. Schriber effective December 1, 2001. Also, effective December 1, 2001, the Commission withdrew for 90 days its approval of Mr. Schriber as a pre-licensing and continuing education update course instructor. The Commission then stayed the withdrawal for a probationary period of one year. The Commission found that Mr. Schriber made certain remarks in a Commission-approved broker pre-licensing course that were unnecessary to the course subject matter and offended the sensibilities of students.
JEANNETTE SILVERTHORNE (Greensboro) – By Consent, the Commission suspended Ms. Silverthorne’s broker license for ninety days effective October 1, 2001. Thirty days of the suspension were active and the remaining period stayed for a probationary period of one year. The Commission found that Ms. Silverthorne, as a broker in the sale of a house and lot, failed to disclose to the closing attorney or the lender providing a loan secured by the property a loan of $2,000 from the seller to the buyer to use as part of the purchase price. The transaction closed and the closing attorney’s office failed to properly record the loan payment on the closing statement provided to the parties and the lender.
ELIZABETH E. TAYLOR (Kitty Hawk) – By Consent, the Commission revoked Ms. Taylor’s broker license effective October 1, 2001. The Commission found that Ms. Taylor, while engaged in rental management with a real estate company, purchased a computer for more than $1,500 using a company credit card and made a false statement that the computer was intended as an amenity for a client’s property. The Commission also found that Ms. Taylor failed to report convictions for driving while impaired and misdemeanor larceny as required by Commission rules. Ms. Taylor neither admitted nor denied the Commission findings, but did consent to the revocation of her license based upon the Commission making those findings.
LYNN R. WARREN (Henderson) – The Commission accepted the voluntary surrender of Ms. Warren’s salesperson license for a period of one year effective November 1, 2001. The Commission dismissed without prejudice allegations that Ms. Warren violated the Real Estate License Law. Ms. Warren neither admitted nor denied any misconduct.
CASEY M. YORK (Greenville) – By Consent, the Commission suspended the salesperson license of Ms. York for a period of two years effective January 10, 2001. The Commission found that Ms. York failed to amend an offer to purchase and to disclose that an earnest money deposit received for the purchase of Ms. York’s residence had been withdrawn from the firm trust account. The Commission also found that Ms. York, who received the money for repairs, signed a false settlement statement indicating that the earnest money was on deposit when it was not.
This article came from the February 2002-Vol32-4 edition of the bulletin.
The Association of Real Estate License Law Officials (ARELLO) presented its top education recognition award to the North Carolina Real Estate Commission for its “Total Education Program.”
This award honors a jurisdiction’s real estate licensing agency for operating an overall education program that is judged to be particularly outstanding based on awards criteria such as program design, program standards, innovation, resources devoted to the program and benefits of the program.
Specific aspects of the Commission’s education program that contributed to the Commission’s selection for this honor include:
New Broker Prelicensing Course —The emphasis on practical application of laws, rules and concepts, inclusion of a major section on “Introduction to Commercial Real Estate Brokerage,” and provision by the Commission of high quality course final examinations for use by instructors are particularly noteworthy.
Standards for Prelicensing and CE Update Course Instructors — Prospective CE update course instructors have long been required to demonstrate by videotape that they possess minimally acceptable basic teaching skills. Prelicensing instructors are now subject to this requirement and new instructors must attend a Commission-sponsored New Instructor Seminar. In addition, prelicensing instructors must obtain instructor continuing education to renew their approval.
CE Update Course — The Commission-developed mandatory update course, featuring entirely different subject matter each year, is highly regarded for the quality of information and instruction.
CE Elective Course Standards — The Commission utilizes very strict elective course approval standards in an effort to assure that approved courses serve the public interest and meet minimum quality standards regarding the information to be provided, course design, materials and similar matters.
Instructor Training — The Commission sponsors a two-day Real Estate Educators Conference each year for the benefit of approved instructors and other real estate educators. The Commission also conducts two six-hour training sessions for CE update course instructors each year to help prepare them to teach the update course for that year.
Broker-in-Charge Course — Since October 2000, all newly designated brokers-in-charge must take this Commission-developed course within 90 days of being designated. The 4 1/2-hour, PowerPoint®-based course focuses on the legal and practical responsibilities of brokers-in-charge and is conducted by the Commission 4-5 times a month at various locations across the state.
Trust Account Course — The Commission conducts both a Basic Trust Account Course and a Resort Property Managers Trust Account Course for licensees. The basic course is taught once a month in Raleigh and both are taught each spring in several locations across the state. The courses utilize a PowerPoint®-based instructional program.
North Carolina Real Estate Manual— The Commission publishes biennially this text on North Carolina real estate law and brokerage practices. It is used in the broker prelicensing course and also serves as a reference book for practitioners. The 718-page Manual features detailed coverage and many practical examples not found elsewhere.
Information Publications for Licensees and Consumers — The Commission publishes a licensee newsletter, the Real Estate Bulletin, a Working with Real Estate Agents brochure (which licensees must provide to prospective sellers and buyers), and aResidential Square Footage Guidelines booklet. In addition, the Commission publishes free of charge to licensees and consumers a series of Question and Answer brochures on *Fair Housing, *Renting Residential Real Estate, *Tenant Security Deposits, Condos and Townhouses, Residential Subdivisions and Planned Communities, Home Inspections, and Purchasing Coastal Real Estate in North Carolina (* available in a Spanish language edition).
The Commission is very proud to have received the ARELLO award recognizing its achievements in the education area. [ARELLO is an international organization of real estate licensing agencies and individuals involved with regulation of the real estate industry.]
This article came from the February 2002-Vol32-4 edition of the bulletin.