Disciplinary Actions
DAVID
G. ARNETT D/B/A DGA REALTY (Charlotte) – The Commission accepted the permanent
voluntary surrender of the broker license of Mr. Arnett effective September 1,
2007. The Commission dismissed without prejudice allegations that Mr. Arnett
violated provisions of the Real Estate License Law and the Commission rules.
Mr. Arnett neither admitted nor denied misconduct.
MICHAEL
T. BALL
(Loganville, Georgia) – The Commission accepted
the voluntary surrender of the broker license of Mr. Ball for a period of 30
months effective July 16, 2007. The Commission dismissed without prejudice
allegations that Mr. Ball violated provisions of the Real Estate License Law
and the Commission rules. Mr. Ball neither admitted nor denied misconduct.
WALTER
E. BARRINGER (Charlotte) – The Commission
revoked the broker license of Mr. Barringer effective
June 4, 2007. The Commission found that Mr. Barringer
made a false claim for a commission. The Commission also found that Mr. Barringer misrepresented to two sellers that he had
procured buyers for their properties and that he or a buyer would make the
mortgage payments on their properties until sold. The Commission further found
that Mr. Barringer failed to deposit option money
from two buyers into a trust account, and failed to account to the buyers or
sellers for the option money.
WILBUR
L. BECK
(Fayetteville)
– By Consent, the Commission reprimanded Mr. Beck effective October 1, 2007.
The Commission found that Mr. Beck, as broker-in-charge of a real estate brokerage
firm, failed to maintain records of all receipts and disbursements of the funds
of others in such a manner as to create a clear audit trail. The Commission
noted Mr. Beck subsequently implemented a new trust accounting software program
to bring the records into compliance, and that no consumer incurred any
financial loss as a result of Mr. Beck’s conduct.
VICKIE
P. BARTLETT
(Sparta) – By
Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Ms. Bartlett for a
period of two years effective May 30, 2007. Three months of the suspension were
active with the remainder stayed for a probationary period of 21 months. The
Commission found that Ms. Bartlett, following her guilty plea, was convicted in
federal court of aiding and abetting health care fraud and sentenced to two
years probation and to pay a fine and restitution.
BEST
REALTY INC.
(Stanley) – By Consent, the Commission reprimanded Best Realty effective
September 1, 2007. The Commission found that in 2005, Best Realty served as a
marketing firm for a builder/developer, and failed to disclose to purchasers of
a particular lot that an adjacent property owner claimed a prescriptive
easement across the lot.
RONALD
L. BEST
(Stanley) – By
Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Mr. Best for a period
of one year effective September 1, 2007. The Commission then stayed the
suspension for a probationary period one year. The Commission found that in
2005, Mr. Best, a builder/developer, marketed a subdivision he developed and
failed to disclose to purchasers of a particular lot that an adjacent property
owner claimed a prescriptive easement across the lot, and that after closing,
the purchasers and their builder were sued by the adjacent property owner. The
Commission noted that the suit was settled by Mr. Best buying the adjacent
property owner’s property.
LINDA
BLACKBURN
(Surf City) – By Consent, the commission
suspended the broker license of Ms. Blackburn for a period of 60 days effective
September 1, 2007. The Commission then stayed the suspension for a probationary
period of one year. The Commission found that Ms. Blackburn, as
broker-in-charge of a real estate brokerage firm, made no effort to review or
oversee trust account procedures and therefore failed to detect significant
trust account problems and shortages.
ROBERT
J. BLACKBURN
(Durham) -- By
Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Mr. Blackburn for a
period of one year effective May 10, 2007. Thirty days of the suspension were
active, with the remainder stayed for a probationary period. The Commission found that Mr. Blackburn acted
as an agent in a transaction where the buyers received loan(s) from the seller
in order to exit bankruptcy and close the transaction and failed to assure that
the loan(s) were reflected on the closing statement prepared by the closing
attorney. The Commission also found that Mr. Blackburn received a payment from
the seller in the transaction which was not reflected on the closing statement.
The Commission noted that Mr. Blackburn presented evidence tending to show that
the loan was disclosed to both the mortgage broker and closing attorney, the
buyers qualified for the loan, the loan was promptly repaid, and the payment to
Mr. Blackburn was based upon his services in assisting the development and construction
of the subdivision.
AARON
JOSHUA BLACKWELDER (Harrisburg)
– By Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Mr. Blackwelder for a period of one year effective May 11,
2007. Thirty days of the suspension were active with the remainder stayed for a
probationary period of eleven months. The Commission found that Mr. Blackwelder was convicted of Possession of Drug
Paraphernalia and Driving While Impaired and failed to timely report
the possession convictions and to respond in a timely fashion to Commission
inquiries about it. The Commission noted that Mr. Blackwelder
properly disclosed the conviction for Driving While Impaired.
ELAINE
F. BRIDGES
(Cary) – By
Consent, the Commission reprimanded Ms. Bridges effective July 1, 2007. The
Commission found that Ms. Bridges, as listing agent for a new construction
home, failed to disclose that an advertised four-bedroom home only had a
three-bedroom septic permit and failed to disclose that a civil settlement
required the builder to brick two additional sides of the exterior and that the
impervious footprint of the property had been maximized.
GARLAND
BURTON, JR.
(Cary) – By Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Mr. Burton
for a period of one year effective August 1, 2007. The Commission then stayed
the suspension for a probationary period of 36 months under certain conditions.
The Commission found that Mr. Burton failed to report on his original 1994
license application, criminal convictions in 1983 for injury to real property
and 1984 for three counts of worthless check charges. The Commission noted that
Mr. Burton, in his application for reinstatement of his expired broker license
in February 2007, disclosed the criminal convictions as well as a conviction in
2006 for driving while impaired.
DONALD
L. CANNON
(Fayetteville)
– By Consent, the Commission revoked the broker license of Mr. Cannon effective
August 15, 2007. The Commission found that Mr. Cannon, acting as an “investment
advisor,” induced certain clients to invest over $100,000 in earnest money
deposits and/or other investment funds in real estate ventures, promising
significant returns. The Commission further found that Mr. Cannon did not
maintain trust accounts or adequate records of the funds of others collected,
deposited and commingled the funds in his or his wife’s personal bank accounts,
did not invest the money in any real estate transaction as promised, and did
not return or repay these funds. Mr. Cannon neither admitted nor denied the
Commission’s findings.
EVA
M. CHANDLER
(Elizabeth City) – By Consent, the Commission
reprimanded Ms. Chandler effective September 1, 2007. The Commission found that
Ms. Chandler served as the buyer agent in a residential property transaction in
which she represented to the buyers that the lot included all the maintained
property to the street. The Commission also found that Ms. Chandler failed to
provide the buyers before closing with a copy of a survey showing that the lot
was substantially smaller than had been represented, or to disclose to the
buyers the survey’s contents. The Commission noted that the buyers had to
expend substantial effort and additional cash to secure the portion of the land
that was not included in their property.
DANIEL
J. COOK
(Asheville) –
By Consent, the Commission revoked the broker license of Mr. Cook effective
June 1, 2007. The Commission found that Mr. Cook failed to report a criminal
conviction and pending criminal charges on his application for a real estate
license and was licensed in reliance upon his false statement. The Commission
also found that Mr. Cook failed to disclose a subsequent conviction for Driving
While Impaired within 60 days of the final judgment.
IRIS
S. COOPER
(Kill Devil Hills) – By consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of
Ms. Cooper for a period of three years.
Ten months of the suspension are active, with the remainder stayed for a
probationary period of twenty-six months.
The Commission found that Ms. Cooper was convicted of certain criminal
offenses relating to driving and possession between 1998 and 2002. The Commission noted that Ms. Cooper reported
the convictions in 2006 of her own volition.
SHANE
E. CORBETT
(Charlotte) – The Commission revoked the broker license of Mr. Corbett
effective May 23, 2007. The Commission found that Mr. Corbett engaged in the
criminal misconduct of assault on a female and was convicted for it and
sentenced to a term of 150 days of imprisonment, of which 30 days were active,
and the remainder stayed for 36 months of supervised probation.
BETTY A. CRAWFORD (Asheville) – The Commission accepted the
voluntary surrender of the broker license of Ms. Crawford for a period of two
years effective June 1, 2007. The Commission dismissed without prejudice
allegations that Ms. Crawford violated provisions of the Real Estate License
Law and Commission rules. Ms. Crawford neither admitted nor denied misconduct.
NORRIS
G. DILLAHUNT
(New Bern) – By
Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Mr. Dillahunt
for a period of 24 months. Three months of the suspension were active with the
remainder stayed. The Commission found that Mr. Dillahunt
was convicted of driving while intoxicated twice, and of numerous counts of
writing worthless checks, and that he failed to report the worthless check
offenses within 60 days as required by Commission rules.
ERVIN
& ASSOCIATES (Fayetteville)
– By Consent, the Commission reprimanded Ervin & Associates effective May
11, 2007. The Commission found that Ervin & Associates, a rental property
management firm, failed to maintain records of all receipts and disbursements
of the funds of others in such a manner as to create a clear audit trail. The
Commission noted that Ervin & Associates subsequently implemented a new
trust accounting software program to bring its records into compliance and that
no consumer incurred any financial losses as a result of the firm’s conduct.
ESM
ASSOCIATES, LLC (Chapel Hill) – By Consent,
the Commission reprimanded ESM Associates effective September 1, 2007. The
Commission found that ESM Associates, which managed a commercial rental
property and property owners association (POA) for a commercial condominium
building, failed to maintain a trust account for a rental unit and failed to
charge late fees to the tenant despite receiving eight late payments. The
Commission also found that ESM Associates paid certain of the tenant’s utility
and waste management expenses from the POA funds, which the owner was then
required to repay, and the POA account and the individual owners accounts were
charged insufficient funds fees on a number of occasions because ESM allowed
shortages to accrue in these accounts. The Commission noted that ESM Associates
no longer performs property or POA management and no longer maintains trust
monies.
KENNETH
L. FRIEDMAN
(Matthews) – By Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Mr.
Friedman for a period of one year effective June 1, 2007. The Commission found
that Mr. Friedman represented several buyers in transactions in which
misrepresentations were made on the closing statement by the mortgage broker
and others in the transactions and that Mr. Friedman failed to provide an
accurate accounting to his clients for the receipts and disbursements connected
with the closing. Mr. Friedman neither admitted nor denied the Commission’s
findings.
FRIENDLY CITY,
LLC
(Swansboro) – By Consent, the Commission revoked the firm license of Friendly City effective June 15, 2007. The
Commission found that Friendly
City, acting as a broker
and rental agent for owners of residential rental properties, failed to
reconcile its trust account records with its bank statements, transferred
client monies from its trust accounts without authority, and had a shortfall in
the trust account of $25,000. The Commission noted that the missing monies were
replaced.
MICHELLE
L. GAILEY
(Fayetteville)
– By Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Ms. Gailey for a period of six months effective June 10, 2007.
The Commission then stayed the suspension for a probationary period of six months.
The Commission found that in 2004 and 2005, Ms. Gailey
listed several land and manufactured home packages for a single seller for a
flat fee, despite knowledge that the listing prices were inflated, and, in
doing so, created a basis for artificially inflated appraisals and comps.
MARIAN
L. GOETZINGER
(Pine Knoll Shores)
– By Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Ms. Goetzinger for a period of two years effective July 1,
2007. The Commission then stayed the suspension. The Commission found that Ms. Goetzinger, principal broker and broker-in-charge of a real
estate brokerage firm, listed a property for $220,000, which was purchased by
an associate in the office for $190,000 when the property appraised in its then
current condition for $255,000. The Commission noted that Ms. Goetzinger made an offer to her seller clients calculated
to compensate them for their perceived loss. Mr. Goetzing
neither admitted nor denied the Commission’s findings.
MATTIAS
M. GOULD
(Raleigh) – By
Consent, the Commission reprimanded Mr. Gould effective August 1, 2007. The
Commission found that Mr. Gould, developer of a townhouse project, failed to
ensure that the listing agent for the townhouses disclosed to purchasers the
existence of an encroachment by several townhouses on a required stream buffer.
The Commission noted that Mr. Gould secured a variance for the encroachment.
ROGER
G. HARLESS
(Lenoir) – By Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Mr. Harless for a period of two years effective March 15, 2007.
The Commission found that Mr. Harless, acting as an
appraisal trainee, performed appraisals of two properties, which he overvalued
in a manner inconsistent with the requirements of the Uniform Standards of
Professional Appraisal Practice and he was disciplined by the North Carolina
Appraisal Board.
HERNDON
& HERNDON ENTERPRISES LLC (Raleigh) - By Consent, the Commission revoked the
firm license of Herndon and Herndon effective September 1, 2007. The Commission
found that Herndon and Herndon, a real estate brokerage firm, was unable to
produce records of certain real estate transactions requested by the Commission
during 2006 and 2007. Herndon & Herndon neither admitted nor denied the
Commission’s findings.
TISHA
D. HERRING
(Durham) – By
Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Ms. Herring for a
period of six months effective September 1, 2007. The Commission then stayed
the suspension for a probationary period of one year. The Commission found that Ms. Herring sold
her personal residence and provided owner-financing to the buyer in the form of
a second deed of trust and the financing was not disclosed to the buyer’s
lender or shown on the HUD closing statement.
BILLIE
C. HOFFMAN
(Mooresville) – By Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Ms.
Hoffman for a period of two years effective March 15, 2007. The Commission
found that Ms. Hoffman represented herself and her real estate brokerage firm
as being affiliated with the Realty World franchise when she no longer had a right
to do so. The Commission also found that Ms. Hoffman was enjoined by the Wake
County District Court on October 12, 2005 from using the franchise name, but
continued to do so, and was found in contempt in May, 2006, after which she
ceased using the Realty World name and paid the money judgment the court
awarded to the franchisor. Finally, the Commission found that Ms. Hoffman
failed to make a timely response to letters of inquiry from the Commission.
HOME
AND SEEK INC.
(Charlotte) - By Consent, the Commission revoked the firm license of Home and
Seek effective September 6, 2007. The Commission found that Home and Seek, a
real estate brokerage firm, failed to properly account for the funds of others
held in trust, failed to maintain and retain records sufficient to identify the
ownership of those funds, including separate ledgers for each transaction or
property, and a general journal, and to maintain records in such a manner as to
create a clear audit trail. The Commission also found that Home and Seek failed
to make the trust account records available for inspection by an auditor for
the Commission.
HOME
FINDER REAL ESTATE INC. (Fayetteville)
– By Consent, the Commission revoked the firm license of Home Finder Real
Estate effective August 15, 2007. The Commission found that Home Finder Real
Estate, acting as an “investment advisor,” induced certain clients to invest
over $100,000 in earnest money deposits and/or other investment funds in real
estate ventures, promising significant returns. The Commission found that Home
Finder Real Estate did not maintain trust accounts or adequate records of the
funds of others collected, commingled the funds, did not invest the money in
any real estate transaction as promised, and did not return or repay these
funds.
CLARK
HUNTER
(Southport) – By Consent, the Commission
reprimanded Mr. Hunter effective October 1, 2007. The Commission found that Mr.
Hunter, as on-site sales agent for a subdivision marketing new homes,
represented that a pool and clubhouse would be constructed in the development
and that neighboring apartments would be “high end”, when, in fact, the
amenities were not provided and the neighboring apartments were not as Mr.
Hunter represented.
SAMUEL E. HUTCHENS (Pine Knoll Shores) - By Consent, the Commission suspended
the broker license of Mr. Hutchens for a period of two years effective July 1,
2007. The Commission then stayed the suspension upon certain conditions. The
Commission found that the Mr. Hutchens, an associate with a real estate
brokerage firm, purchased for $190,000 a property listed by the firm for
$220,000, when the property appraised in its current condition for $255,000.
The Commission noted that Mr. Hutchens made an offer to his seller clients
calculated to compensate them for their perceived loss. Mr. Hutchens neither
admitted nor denied the Commission’s findings.
DAVID
G. JACKSON
(Fremont) – By
Consent, the Commission revoked the broker license of Mr. Jackson effective
September 1, 2007. The Commission found that Mr. Jackson failed to deposit,
maintain and account for rents and security deposits belonging to clients and
tenants in a trust account in accordance with Commission rules, and wrote trust
account checks that were returned for insufficient funds.
JACKSON
REALTY & ASSOCIATES (Goldsboro)
– By Consent, the Commission revoked the firm license of Jackson Realty &
Associates effective September 1, 2007. The Commission found that Jackson
Realty failed to deposit, maintain and account for rents and security deposits
belonging to clients and tenants in a trust account in accordance with
Commission rules, and wrote trust account checks that were returned for
insufficient funds.
MELENAH
JAMERSON
(Sanford) – By
Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Ms. Jamerson
for a period of two years effective January 1, 2007. Nine months of the
suspension were active with the remainder stayed for a probationary period of
15 months under certain conditions. The Commission found that Ms. Jamerson, acting as bookkeeper for a real estate brokerage
firm, failed in certain cases to safeguard in a trust account rents, security
deposits, earnest money deposits and other monies belonging to clients and
customers. The Commission also found that Ms. Jamerson
engaged in commingling and did not keep records that provided a clear audit
trail identifying the owners of the funds held. The Commission noted that Ms. Jamerson took steps to bring the firm’s trust account
bookkeeping into compliance with Commission rules.
RONALD
H. JOHNSON
(Raleigh) – By
Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Mr. Johnson for a
period of 42 months effective January 1, 2007. Five months of the suspension
were active with the remainder stayed for a probationary period of three years.
The Commission found that in 2002 Mr. Johnson pled guilty to Felonious
Speeding to Elude Arrest, Felonious Possession to Sell Cocaine (2
counts) and to Driving While Impaired.
PAMELA
K. LARSON
(Atlantic Beach) – The Commission accepted the
voluntary surrender of the broker license of Ms. Larson for a period of one
year effective August 1, 2007. The Commission dismissed without prejudice
allegations that Ms. Larson violated provisions of the Real Estate License Law
and Commission rules. Ms. Larson neither admitted nor denied misconduct.
LAWTON
PROPERTIES, Inc. (Durham)
– By Consent, the Commission reprimanded Lawton Properties effective June 1,
2007. The Commission found that Lawton Properties rented a property it managed
to a family member and failed to collect tenant security or pet deposits from
the tenants. The Commission also found that after the tenants vacated the
property, it was discovered that the tenants’ dogs damaged the property. The
Commission noted that Lawton Properties paid the property owner the amount of
the security deposit money it failed to collect and has offered to pay for the
repair of a portion of the damages to the property.
ARTHUR
L. LEZETTE
(Durham) – By
Consent, the Commission reprimanded Mr. Lezette
effective June 1, 2007. The Commission found that Mr. Lezette, while
broker-in-charge of a real estate brokerage firm, rented a property managed by
the firm to a family member and failed to collect tenant security or pet
deposits from the tenants. The Commission also found that after the tenants
vacated the property, it was discovered that the tenants’ dogs damaged the
property. The Commission noted that Mr. Lezette paid
the property owner the amount of the security deposit money he failed to
collect and has offered to pay for the repair of a portion of the damages to
the property.
BARBARA
A. LEZETTE
(Durham) – By
Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Ms. Lezette
for a period of one year effective June 1, 2007. One month of the suspension
was active with the remainder stayed for a probationary period of one year. The
Commission found that Ms. Lezette, as a broker
associate of a real estate brokerage firm, rented a property it managed to a
family member and failed to collect tenant security or pet deposits from the
tenants. The Commission also found that after the tenants vacated the property,
it was discovered that the tenants’ dogs damaged the property. The Commission
noted that Ms. Lezette paid the property owner the
amount of the security deposit money she failed to collect and has offered to
pay for the repair of a portion of the damages to the property.
ROBERT
B. LOGAN
(Goldsboro) –
By Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Mr. Logan for 30
days effective October 1, 2007. The Commission then stayed the suspension for a
probationary period of 30 days. The Commission found that Mr. Logan represented
a property as being 2,276 square feet when, in fact, the property was 2,030
square feet, an overstatement in size of 12%; he failed to measure the square
footage of the property as constructed and instead relied on an architect’s
pre-construction calculations.
STEPHEN
J. MANTON
(Chapel Hill) – By Consent, the Commission
suspended the broker license of Mr. Manton for a period of two years effective
September 1, 2007. Four months of the suspension are to be active with the
remainder stayed for a probationary term of 20 months. The Commission found
that Mr. Manton, who managed a commercial rental property and property owners
association (POA) for a commercial condominium building, failed to maintain a
trust account for a rental unit and failed to charge late fees to the tenant
despite receiving eight late payments. The Commission also found that Mr.
Manton paid certain of the tenant’s utility and waste management expenses from
the POA funds, which the owner was then required to repay, and the POA account
and the individual owners accounts were charged insufficient funds fees on a
number of occasions because Mr. Manton allowed shortages to accrue in these
accounts. The Commission noted that Mr. Manton no longer performs property or
POA management and no longer maintains trust account monies.
BENNY
R. MAYFIELD
(Winston-Salem)
– The Commission revoked the broker license of Mr. Mayfield effective August
16, 2007. The Commission found that Mr. Mayfield falsely entered another
broker’s name on contracts, falsely represented himself as a broker when not
licensed as such, practiced real estate brokerage when unauthorized to do so
and when not under the supervision of a broker-in-charge, failed to deliver
copies of transaction documents to the firm of record, and used a licensed
broker’s name on contracts without the broker’s knowledge in order to practice
real estate services when unauthorized to do so.
TRESHELL
Y. MAYO
(Raleigh) – By
Consent, the Commission revoked the broker license of Ms. Mayo effective
September 1, 2007. The Commission found that Ms. Mayo, qualifying broker and
broker-in-charge of a real estate brokerage firm, was unable to produce records
of certain real estate transactions requested by the Commission during 2006 and
2007. Ms. Mayo neither admitted nor denied the Commission’s findings.
JULIA
M. MCINTOSH
(Cary) – By
Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Ms. McIntosh for a
period of one year effective September 1, 2007. The Commission then stayed the
suspension for a probationary period of one year. The Commission found that Ms.
McIntosh, as broker-in-charge of a real estate brokerage firm, allowed a former
licensee whose license had been revoked to sign settlement statements and other
closing documents and endorse commission checks. The Commission also found that
Ms. McIntosh accepted an earnest money deposit which was deposited in an
account in the former licensee’s name and not in a trust account as required.
The Commission noted that the transaction closed and the earnest money was
correctly credited to the buyer.
ROBERT
H. MELVILLE, JR. (Whiteville) – By Consent, the Commission suspended the
broker license of Mr. Melville for a period of three months effective May 1.
The Commission found that Mr. Melville, who was also licensed by the North
Carolina State Bar as an attorney, closed a transaction in which the buyers
purchased a home and lot and, in connection with the transaction, acted
unintentionally in a manner that was improper on account of clerical error.
THERESE
M. MOLONEY
(Gastonia) – By
Consent, the Commission reprimanded Ms. Moloney
effective June 1, 2007. The Commission found that Ms. Moloney,
in listing a foreclosure property for a lender which was identified to her by
address, incorrectly assumed that two adjoining lots owned by the lender,
rather than one of the lots, were to be offered for sale and thus prepared a
broker price opinion based on the combined size of both lots, resulting in an
inaccurate lot size being listed in the MLS.
ROSANNE
MULLER
(Charlotte) – By Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Ms.
Muller effective June 1, 2007. One month was active with the remainder stayed.
The Commission found that Ms. Muller, who owned several rental properties with
her then husband, closed the trust account they maintained for tenant security
deposits when going through a divorce and transferred all funds to a different
account. The Commission noted that the funds were awarded to Ms. Muller as part
of the subsequent divorce settlement.
PINE KNOLL
SHORES, LLC (Pine Knoll Shores) – By Consent, the Commission suspended the
firm license of Pine
Knoll Shores
for a period of two years effective July 1, 2007. The Commission then stayed
the suspension on certain conditions. The Commission found that the firm listed
a property for $220,000, which was purchased by an associate in the office for
$190,000 when the property appraised in its current condition for $255,000. The
Commission noted that Pine
Knoll Shores
made an offer to its seller clients calculated to compensate them for their
perceived loss. Pine
Knoll Shores
neither admitted nor denied the Commission’s findings.
JOHN
ROBERT POTTS
(Highlands) – By Consent, the Commission
revoked the broker license of Mr. Potts effective October 1, 2007. The
Commission found that Mr. Potts was convicted in January 2006 of the felony
offense of trafficking cocaine and was sentenced to 36-42 months in prison and
required to pay costs, restitution and a $50,000 fine.
JOHN
R. RAMSPERGER
(Sanford) – By
Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Mr. Ramsperger
for a period of two years effective January 1, 2007. Four months of the
suspension were active with the remainder stayed for a probationary period of
20 months under certain conditions. The Commission found that Mr. Ramsperger, broker-in-charge of a real estate brokerage
firm, failed in certain cases to safeguard in a trust account rents, security
deposits, earnest money deposits and other monies belonging to clients and
customers. The Commission also found that Mr. Ramsperger
engaged in commingling and did not keep records that provided a clear audit
trail identifying the owners of the funds held. The Commission noted that Mr. Ramsperger took steps to bring the firm’s trust account
bookkeeping into compliance with Commission rules.
KIMBERLY
A. RUSS
(Southport) – By Consent, the Commission
suspended the broker license of Ms. Russ for a period of one year effective
October 1, 2007. The Commission then stayed the suspension for a probationary
period of one year. The Commission found that Ms. Russ, acting as a dual agent
for an Offer to Purchase Contract with a Contingent Sale Addendum that was
fully executed in July 2005, received an acceptable offer from another buyer in
December 2005 and failed to notify the first buyer in writing of the second
offer as required under the Contingent Sale Addendum. The Commission also found
that there was a dispute over whether Ms. Russ ever notified the first buyer of
the second offer. Even though the second offer was accepted, Ms. Russ
thereafter went to the property with the first buyer to let the first buyer
measure for curtains.
SANFORD
REAL ESTATE, INC. (Sanford) – By Consent, the Commission suspended the firm
license of Sanford Real Estate for a period of two years effective January 1,
2007. The Commission then stayed the suspension for a period of two years under
certain conditions. The Commission found that Sanford Real Estate failed in
certain cases to safeguard in a trust account rents, security deposits, earnest
money deposits and other monies belonging to clients and customers. The
Commission also found that Sanford Real Estate engaged in commingling and did
not keep records that provided a clear audit trail identifying the owners of
the funds held. The Commission noted that Sanford Real Estate took steps to
bring the firm’s trust account bookkeeping into compliance with Commission
rules.
ROBERT
A. SAXTON
(Statesville) –
By Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Mr. Saxton for a
period of six months effective June 1, 2007. Thirty days were active with the
remainder stayed for a probationary period of one year. The Commission found
that Mr. Saxton entered into a contract to purchase a house for his personal residence;
before the time established for closing, he occupied the house and used it as
his residence without the seller’s authority. The Commission also found that
Mr. Saxton paid no rent and vacated the property after one month’s occupancy
and did not close his purchase transaction.
TIMOTHY
P. SCAER
(Newton) – By
Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Mr. Scaer
for a period of one year effective June 10, 2007. The Commission then stayed
the suspension for a probationary period of one year. The Commission found that
Mr. Scaer listed a property zoned “M-1” (limiting its
use to manufacturing purposes), showed it to representatives of a church
looking for a property to build a new church, listed himself as a dual agent on
their purchase contract without reviewing the Working With Real Estate Agents
brochure with his buyers and without getting a signed dual agency agreement,
and noted the “M-1” zoning classification on the purchase contract in the space
for the buyer’s intended use instead of specifying the actual intended use. The
Commission found that the church discovered after closing that the property
could not be used as the church intended.
TINA
M. SCOTT
(Longs, SC) – By Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Ms.
Scott for a period of 12 months effective April 15, 2007. Fifty-six days of the
suspension were active with the remainder stayed. The Commission found that Ms.
Scott sold her personal residence and led the buyer to believe that no
commercial pesticides had been used inside the house, when in fact pesticides
had been used. The Commission also found that Ms. Scott was involved in a
lawsuit with a neighboring property owner concerning a driveway encroachment
and did not tell the buyer until the schedule closing.
SELLER’S
ASSOCIATE, INC. (Fayetteville)
– By Consent, the Commission reprimanded Seller’s Associate effective June 10,
2007. The Commission found that in 2004 and 2005, Seller’s Associate listed
several land and manufactured home packages for a single seller for a flat fee,
despite knowledge that the prices were inflated, and, in doing so, created a
basis for artificially inflated appraisals and comps.
THERESA B. SHANNON (Greensboro) – The Commission accepted the voluntary surrender of the broker license
of Ms. Shannon for a period of one year effective May 1, 2007. The Commission
dismissed without prejudice allegations that Ms. Shannon violated provisions of
the Real Estate Law and Commission rules. Ms. Shannon neither admitted nor
denied misconduct.
ROBIN
B. SHINN
(Indian Trail) – By Consent, the Commission permanently revoked the broker
license of Ms. Shinn effective May 11, 2007. The Commission found that Ms.
Shinn participated in a series of transactions in which she arranged to
purchase unsold “spec” houses at discount prices from the inventory of a
homebuilder and then actually sold each house to a purchaser for a
significantly higher price. The Commission further found that of the difference
between the price of the contracts with the homebuilders and with the
purchasers shown on the closing statement was paid to Ms. Shinn but shown on
the closing statement as a payment for some fictitious service or debt. Ms.
Shinn neither admitted nor denied the Commission’s findings.
LYNDA
J. SKIPPER
(Matthews) – The Commission permanently revoked the broker license of Ms.
Skipper effective June 18, 2007. The Commission found that Ms. Skipper failed
to disclose on her 2002 broker license application convictions for driving
while impaired in 1992 and 1994; engaged in and was convicted in 2004 of the
criminal misconduct of driving while impaired and reckless driving; failed to
disclose the 2004 conviction for driving while impaired within 60 days and
failed to disclose at all the conviction of reckless driving; and failed to respond
fully, fairly and timely to letters of inquiry from the Commission staff.
JOHN
WAYNE SPIVEY
(Sanford) – By
Consent, the Commission suspended the broker license of Mr. Spivey for a period
of two years effective October 1, 2007. Four months of the suspension are to be
active with the remainder stayed for a probationary period of 20 months. The
Commission found that Mr. Spivey, acting as a notary public, failed to verify
the authenticity of the signatures on a deed wherein the grantor’s signature
had been forged, and failed to report the December 29, 2005 revocation of his
notary public appointment.
SUNSHINE
REAL ESTATE
(Cary) - By Consent, the Commission reprimanded Sunshine Real Estate effective
July 1, 2007. The Commission found that Sunshine Real Estate listed a newly
constructed home as a three-bedroom home in the MLS, but advertised it
elsewhere as having four bedrooms even though the home had only a three-bedroom
septic permit. The Commission also found that the firm failed to disclose that
the builder, a principal of the firm, was required by a civil settlement to add
two additional sides of exterior brick and that the impervious footprint of the
property had been maximized, barring the buyer from making any additions to the
property.
DAVID
V. THOMAS
(Boone) – By Consent, the Commission reprimanded Mr. Thomas effective June 10,
2007. The Commission found that Mr. Thomas sold a condominium he owned to a
purchaser and failed to disclose that the property had polybutylene
(“PB”) pipes when there had been PB-pipe related leaks in the condominium
community.
JANE
E. TRUAX
(Southport) – By Consent, the Commission
reprimanded Ms. Truax effective October 1, 2007. The
Commission found that Ms. Truax, as on-site sales
agent for a subdivision marketing new homes, represented that certain amenities
would be constructed in the development, and that neighboring apartments would
be “high end”, when, in fact, the amenities were not provided and the
neighboring apartments were not as she represented.
ROCQUE
A. WAITES
(Rutherfordton) – The Commission permanently revoked the license of Mr. Waites effective July 26, 2007. The Commission found that
Mr. Waites received a $1,000 earnest money check from
buyers payable to the owner of a property while his license was on inactive
status and he was therefore ineligible to engage in any brokerage activities,
and endorsed and cashed the check as if it were his own without authority to do
so. The Commission noted that Mr. Waites eventually
repaid the money to the buyers.
WAYNE
REALTY & INSURANCE CO. (Goldsboro)
- By Consent, the Commission suspended the firm license of Wayne Realty &
Insurance for 30 days effective October 1, 2007. The Commission then stayed the
suspension for a probationary period of 30 days. The Commission found that
Wayne Realty & Insurance represented a property as being 2,276 square feet
when, in fact, the property was 2,030 square feet, an overstatement in size of
12%; and failed to measure the square footage of the property as constructed
and instead relied on an architect’s pre-construction calculations.
FRANKIE
L. WHITE
(Charlotte) –
By Consent, the Commission revoked the broker license of Mr. White effective
September 6, 2007. The Commission found that Mr. White, qualifying broker and
broker-in-charge of a real estate brokerage firm, failed to properly account
for the funds of others held in trust, failed to maintain and retain records
sufficient to identify the ownership of those funds, including separate ledgers
for each transaction or property, and a general journal, and to maintain
records in such a manner as to create a clear audit trail. The Commission also
found that Mr. White failed to make his trust account records available for
inspection by an auditor for the Commission.
DEBORAH
J. WILSON
(Wilmington) -
The Commission accepted the voluntary surrender of the broker license of Ms.
Wilson for a period of one year effective June 1, 2007. The Commission
dismissed without prejudice allegations that Ms. Wilson violated provisions of
the Real Estate License Law and the Commission rules. Ms. Wilson neither
admitted nor denied misconduct.
ERIC
AIGUO YOUNG
(Raleigh) – By Consent, the Commission reprimanded Mr. Young effective June 10,
2007. The Commission found that Mr. Young, acting as the listing agent for the
property, prepared an offer to purchase the property himself after a prior
offer had expired. The Commission further found that when an offer from a third
prospective purchaser was received, Mr. Young used that offer to better his
own; Mr. Young’s offer which was accepted by the seller and neither of the
other potential purchasers was given the opportunity to improve their offers.
HANNAH
SUN YOUNG (Raleigh) - By Consent, the
Commission reprimanded Ms. Young effective June 10, 2007. The Commission found
that Ms. Young, a broker with the listing firm for the property, prepared an
offer to purchase the property herself after a prior offer had expired. The
Commission further found that when an offer from a third prospective purchaser
was received, Ms. Young used that offer to better her own; Ms. Young’s offer
was accepted by the seller and neither of the other potential purchasers was
given the opportunity to improve their offers.