Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:what about the agents? I think they need to be part of the defendants.
If you signed a document from the real estate or agent ir both disclosing a financial interest in those companies, your only defense is failure to read or understand what you signed. You have a better chance if they failed to disclose
I am a real estate agent and the settlement companies are also becoming very sloppy. Yesterday, a settlement agent wanted my seller to sign a federal document that was untruthful and became angry when the client would not sign it. I proposed a simple addendum to the contract that would make the document truthful. Whether buying ir selling try to get the documents you are signing in advance and at least make sure the blank spots in boilerplate documents have your correct information.
What was in the doc? This is useless info unless you provide --not even specifics-- but a little more detail.
Anonymous wrote:In case helpful for people:
If you are a DC resident and was referred by a real estate agent to Allied Title & Escrow, KVS Title, Modern Settlements or Union Settlements for a Washington D.C., real estate transaction. You are eligible for a payment of up to $500.
Link: https://dcoagtitleinsurancerestitution.com/
Deadline is May 5, 2026.
You must provide documentation to support your claim, such as a copy of a settlement statement or closing disclosure that shows the title insurance company used and the date of the transaction.
There are a few dozens of open settlements on https://claimchowder.ai (my friends and I started this side project recently - we would love your feedback!!) It's entirely free and we just wanted to make more people aware of the class action settlements they can claim.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:what about the agents? I think they need to be part of the defendants.
If you signed a document from the real estate or agent ir both disclosing a financial interest in those companies, your only defense is failure to read or understand what you signed. You have a better chance if they failed to disclose
I am a real estate agent and the settlement companies are also becoming very sloppy. Yesterday, a settlement agent wanted my seller to sign a federal document that was untruthful and became angry when the client would not sign it. I proposed a simple addendum to the contract that would make the document truthful. Whether buying ir selling try to get the documents you are signing in advance and at least make sure the blank spots in boilerplate documents have your correct information.
Anonymous wrote:what about the agents? I think they need to be part of the defendants.