B.C. Realtor receives maximum penalty for misconduct related to assignment sales
A Realtor and his personal real estate corporation have had their licences suspended for six months and been ordered to pay $16,000 to the BC Financial Services Authority over misconduct that occurred eight years ago.
In a consent order signed last month and posted online last week, David Chian Wei Yang and David C.W. Yang Personal Real Estate Corporation admitted to the misconduct and agreed to the penalties, which the regulator says were the maximum allowed in 2015 and 2016, when the misconduct occurred.
The penalties stem from five "assignment sales" Yang facilitated for four clients, each of which followed the same basic pattern, according to the consent order.
In each case, Yang represented a buyer who entered an agreement to purchase a property, then "assigned" the contract to a third party before completing the transaction.
The third party agreed to pay a higher price than Yang's client had agreed to pay the original seller, and Yang reported the difference in prices to his brokerage as his commission for the transaction, before retaining a predetermined portion of that amount and passing the rest on to the client.
Three of the five properties involved in this misconduct were located in Vancouver. The other two were in Richmond. They are identified in the consent order only as Property 1 through Property 5.
Details of the transactions were as follows.
- Property 1, Vancouver: Client agreed to purchase for $3 million; assignment sale for $4,060,000; Yang claimed $1,060,000 as commission, retaining $251,851.36 for himself and paying the rest – after brokerage fees – to his client
- Property 2, Richmond: Client agreed to purchase for $850,000; assignment sale for $895,000; Yang claimed $45,000 as commission, retaining $6,790 for himself and paying the rest – after brokerage fees – to his client
- Property 3, Richmond: Client agreed to purchase for $2,068,000; assignment sale for $2.3 million; Yang claimed $232,000 as commission, retaining $19,790 for himself and paying the rest – after brokerage fees – to his client
- Property 4, Vancouver: Client agreed to purchase for $3.8 million; assignment sale for $4,450,000; Yang claimed $650,000 as commission, retaining $188,225.43 for himself and paying the rest – after brokerage fees – to his client
- Property 5, Vancouver: Client agreed to purchase for $3,630,000; assignment sale for $3,890,000; Yang claimed $260,000 as commission, retaining $100,084.32 for himself and paying the rest – after brokerage fees – to his client
In total, based on the figures in the consent order, Yang pocketed more than $566,000 by handling the assignment sales in this way.
Typical Realtor commissions in Metro Vancouver are seven per cent on the first $100,000 of the sale price, plus 2.5 per cent of the remaining total, with the total commission split between the buyer's and seller's agents.
Using these typical figures to calculate commissions on five homes sold at the assignment sale prices in the Yang transactions would have amounted to a little more than $412,000, before being split among Realtors.
In the consent order, Yang admitted to professional misconduct for providing documentation to his brokerage suggesting that his commission was higher than it actually was, and for failing to disclose that he would not be retaining the full commission amount he claimed.
He also admitted to failing to provide proper written disclosure of his commissions to his clients, failing to provide proper documentation to his clients, and failing to avoid conflicts of interest on two occasions in which he personally provided money to clients to help them complete their purchases.
The consent order also describes Yang's behaviour as "conduct unbecoming" that was "contrary to the best interests of the public, undermining public confidence in the real estate industry, or bringing the real estate industry into disrepute."
The Realtor agreed to a six-month suspension of his licence, during which time he will also be prohibited from working as an unlicensed assistant.
Yang must also pay an administrative penalty of $10,000, plus enforcement expenses of $6,000.
"The penalties imposed by BCFSA on this real estate licensee were the maximum allowed when the misconduct occurred," said Jon Vandall, the BCFSA's vice president for compliance and enforcement, in a news release published alongside the consent order last week.
“In 2016, discipline penalties were increased to $250,000 per contravention in order to address and deter misconduct that harms homebuyers and the public interest. New safeguards were also put in place to bring transparency to the practice of contract assignments.”
Correction
This story has been updated to correct the description of how Realtor commissions are calculated. While the figures cited are typical for Metro Vancouver, there is no standard commission for real estate agents across B.C.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
'Say it to my face': Singh confronts heckling protester on Parliament Hill
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh confronted a protester for calling him a 'corrupted bastard' on Parliament Hill on Tuesday.
Bride's family speaks as West Vancouver woman sentenced for driving SUV into wedding party
Sixty-five-year-old Hong Xu, who drove her SUV into a crowd of people celebrating a wedding at her next-door neighbour's house in West Vancouver on Aug. 20, 2022, has been sentenced under the Motor Vehicle Act for driving without due care and attention.
Why it's 'very hard' to find work in Canada
Vacancies have steadily fallen since the glut of nearly one million open posts in 2022. At the time, one in three businesses had trouble hiring staff due to a labour shortage. Since then, vacancies have dropped.
Hezbollah hit by a wave of exploding pagers and blames Israel. At least 9 dead, thousands injured
Pagers used by hundreds of members of the militant group Hezbollah exploded near simultaneously in Lebanon and Syria on Tuesday, killing at least nine people.
Sean 'Diddy' Combs jailed by judge after sex trafficking indictment
Sean 'Diddy' Combs headed to jail Tuesday to await trial in a federal sex trafficking case that accuses him of presiding over a sordid empire of sexual crimes protected by blackmail and shocking acts of violence.
Canucks' Dakota Joshua reveals he is recovering from cancer
Vancouver Canucks forward Dakota Joshua revealed Tuesday he underwent cancer treatment over the summer, and will not be ready to play when the team's training camp begins later this week.
Two people charged in murder of Halifax teen; police believe remains have been found
Halifax Regional Police believe Devon Sinclair Marsman, who disappeared in 2022, was the victim of a homicide and two people have now been charged in his death.
What is racketeering? The crime, explained
Sex trafficking, cheating scandals and mob activity may appear very different. But all fall under the broad umbrella of racketeering.
Man from Phoenix, Ariz., missing after truck plunges off Yukon bridge
Whitehorse RCMP say a man from Phoenix, Ariz., is missing after the truck he was travelling in went off a bridge and plunged into the Yukon River.