Legal Question in Real Estate Law in California
Dear Sir/Ma'am,
Is the bank allowed to increase the amount of the offer after all the offers are opened and checked and one is chosen to be the highest?
We gave an offer of ( 155000$) for a house .In the end our offer was the highest , but they added an additional( 5000$) on it and gave us the first chance to take a decision on it ( 10 hours).We were not able to gather that amount this quick so they sold it to the second person. Because I have studied that no change can be brought in the real offer once all the offers are checked, so I got confused. Thank You.
With Respect,
Siddiqa Noori
2 Answers from Attorneys
I'm confused by your post. Are you referring to a trustee's sale, commonly called a nonjudicial foreclosure? In other words, were you bidding at a foreclosure sale? Or was this a short sale?
First, I assume you refer to a bank selling a house it already owns, rather than a bank's trustee selling a house under a trustee's foreclosure sale process.
In selling real estate it already owns, I believe the bank has a reasonable amount of discretion in how it conducts a sale, including the right to negotiate with offerors after the offers are opened and reviewed. I suggest you go back to the sale announcement or instructions for giving offers to see what it says about negotiations with offerors after the offers are made, if anything.
Of course, the bank cannot increase the amount of someone's offer, but very likely it can ask one or more offerors to increase their offer(s) if the bank is unsatisfied with the highest offer as made.
Generally, I think the rules under which the offers will be received, reviewed and accepted (or not) will be published somewhere before the selling process is opened. And, I think it's likely that the bank reserves the right to conduct further negotiations with one or more offerors after reviewing the offers made.