Sea Devil
Well-Known Member
Of course there are many very honourable and trustworthy yacht brokers but that is because they choose to be, not because the law requires them to be.
There is a difference between the image 'British Yacht Brokers' want to portray and the legal reality.
Yacht Brokers under current legislation have no 'duty of protection' whatsoever to the purchaser. Under the law they do not have to be honest, truthful or reliable in any way whatsoever towards the purchaser. In fact a 2nd hand car salesman has more legal requirements constraining him to the truth than a yacht broker.
I suspect the deposit you pay is not protected, nor is the full and final payment you make for your boat, if the broker goes 'broke' before the money reaches the vendor.
Yacht Brokers defend this 'non protection of the purchaser' by saying:
'It is the vendor who pays us. therefore we only owe a duty of trust and loyalty to the vendor'.
This is somewhat disingenuous. A commission of around 8% + - is normally charged for a successful sale. Clearly the vendor/seller 'enhances' the price he will settle for, in order to accommodate that amount of money he will 'loose/pay' in commission to the broker. In my own experience, I have always sold all my boats (8 or 9) privately, with an asking price of at least 5% lower than the prices asked by brokerage companies. I have then negotiated an acceptable price, knowing I am still ahead of the game and the purchaser is too.
The reality of the 'commission' is that actually it is born partly between the buyer and the seller.
On the other hand I have purchased several boats via brokers. I always felt that there was an element of personal protection. That the brokers would act as 'honest brokers' and be a fair and just 'intermediary' between me and the seller/vendor. This is was purely illusionary.
The broker has no legal requirement to be honest or protective towards me, the purchaser, under the present legislation.
The broker can make any statement true or false, change any document, knowingly present a boat or it's equipment, condition whatever and not be in any way responsible. He can legally claim to have no duty of protection towards the purchaser/buyer. It is totally up to the buyer to 'discover' if any of the statements made about the boat by the broker are true or false. For the 8% +- commission, the broker will in no way be responsible for any statement or claim made by the vendor/seller, rather may present every statement made by the vendor as the 'truth', even if they know it is not. If the purchaser/buyer later discovers the broker has lied in his teeth, then he has no claim whatsoever against the broker, only against the vendor/seller who, by then has paid the 8% and vanished. The broker washes their hands of the affaire.
This simply cannot be right.
In this day and age, the broker should have a responsibility both to the vendor/seller and to purchaser/buyer. The broker should be required to ascertain if the claims of the vendor are reasonable and fair. If he is to hold the deposit of the purchaser/buyer then he should certainly be acting like a responsible 'stakeholder' and equally protect both parties.
Brokers take substantial commissions for the sale of expensive items like boats and their equipment and yet take no responsibility for the 'good conduct' of the sale.
This is an unacceptable state of affairs. Nearly all of us have purchased 2nd hand boats, at some time in our sailing careers, frequently via brokers. Brokers offer a useful facility, contact between buyer and seller but should be required legally, to behave in an honest and fair manner. At the moment it is much 'safer' to buy privately from an individual than it is via a yacht broker, who has a law on his side which allows him to make any statement, do anything in order to make the sale 'happen'.
If you would like to see the legislation changed then one route is via your Member of Parliament - do please cut and paste the above if you wish.
If you are a member of the RYA that might well be a way to lobby for some protection and again do use this article.
If you have connections with the Yachting press, then perhaps try to inform them or simply put a copy of the above article on your sailing or yacht club notice board...
It must be possible to change the law - I think?
Michael
There is a difference between the image 'British Yacht Brokers' want to portray and the legal reality.
Yacht Brokers under current legislation have no 'duty of protection' whatsoever to the purchaser. Under the law they do not have to be honest, truthful or reliable in any way whatsoever towards the purchaser. In fact a 2nd hand car salesman has more legal requirements constraining him to the truth than a yacht broker.
I suspect the deposit you pay is not protected, nor is the full and final payment you make for your boat, if the broker goes 'broke' before the money reaches the vendor.
Yacht Brokers defend this 'non protection of the purchaser' by saying:
'It is the vendor who pays us. therefore we only owe a duty of trust and loyalty to the vendor'.
This is somewhat disingenuous. A commission of around 8% + - is normally charged for a successful sale. Clearly the vendor/seller 'enhances' the price he will settle for, in order to accommodate that amount of money he will 'loose/pay' in commission to the broker. In my own experience, I have always sold all my boats (8 or 9) privately, with an asking price of at least 5% lower than the prices asked by brokerage companies. I have then negotiated an acceptable price, knowing I am still ahead of the game and the purchaser is too.
The reality of the 'commission' is that actually it is born partly between the buyer and the seller.
On the other hand I have purchased several boats via brokers. I always felt that there was an element of personal protection. That the brokers would act as 'honest brokers' and be a fair and just 'intermediary' between me and the seller/vendor. This is was purely illusionary.
The broker has no legal requirement to be honest or protective towards me, the purchaser, under the present legislation.
The broker can make any statement true or false, change any document, knowingly present a boat or it's equipment, condition whatever and not be in any way responsible. He can legally claim to have no duty of protection towards the purchaser/buyer. It is totally up to the buyer to 'discover' if any of the statements made about the boat by the broker are true or false. For the 8% +- commission, the broker will in no way be responsible for any statement or claim made by the vendor/seller, rather may present every statement made by the vendor as the 'truth', even if they know it is not. If the purchaser/buyer later discovers the broker has lied in his teeth, then he has no claim whatsoever against the broker, only against the vendor/seller who, by then has paid the 8% and vanished. The broker washes their hands of the affaire.
This simply cannot be right.
In this day and age, the broker should have a responsibility both to the vendor/seller and to purchaser/buyer. The broker should be required to ascertain if the claims of the vendor are reasonable and fair. If he is to hold the deposit of the purchaser/buyer then he should certainly be acting like a responsible 'stakeholder' and equally protect both parties.
Brokers take substantial commissions for the sale of expensive items like boats and their equipment and yet take no responsibility for the 'good conduct' of the sale.
This is an unacceptable state of affairs. Nearly all of us have purchased 2nd hand boats, at some time in our sailing careers, frequently via brokers. Brokers offer a useful facility, contact between buyer and seller but should be required legally, to behave in an honest and fair manner. At the moment it is much 'safer' to buy privately from an individual than it is via a yacht broker, who has a law on his side which allows him to make any statement, do anything in order to make the sale 'happen'.
If you would like to see the legislation changed then one route is via your Member of Parliament - do please cut and paste the above if you wish.
If you are a member of the RYA that might well be a way to lobby for some protection and again do use this article.
If you have connections with the Yachting press, then perhaps try to inform them or simply put a copy of the above article on your sailing or yacht club notice board...
It must be possible to change the law - I think?
Michael