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#1
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![]() Tony Woolner wrote: Is it more difficult to buy a plane from an estate rather than an owner? There is a broker involved who listed the plane. As long as there's a broker involved, it may be easier. Owners sometimes have inflated ideas of the value of an aircraft and refuse to lower the price. If/when they *do* lower the price, they don't call you back (probably an ego thing). The inheritors of an estate frequently have a good idea of what the plane is actually worth and are frequently more willing to bargain, especially if the plane has been listed for a while. If you made an offer early in the listing, the broker will certainly call to see if you're still interested if the owners lower the price later. In addition, most brokers have handled sales before, so the paperwork goes like clockwork. On the down side, the broker is getting at least 5% of the price, and the price may have been adjusted upwards to recoup that expense. George Patterson None of us is as dumb as all of us. |
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Is it more difficult to buy a plane from an estate rather than an owner?
There is a broker involved who listed the plane. Thanks, TonyW. |
#3
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Have a lawyer make sure the person signing the bill of sale
has legal authority to do it. "Tony Woolner" wrote in message ... Is it more difficult to buy a plane from an estate rather than an owner? There is a broker involved who listed the plane. Thanks, TonyW. |
#4
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That's what Brokers and Title Insurance are *FOR*.
A lawyer only gives an opinion. Pepperoni "OtisWinslow" wrote in message .. . Have a lawyer make sure the person signing the bill of sale has legal authority to do it. |
#5
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On Fri, 11 Jun 2004 12:09:59 GMT, "OtisWinslow"
wrote: Have a lawyer make sure the person signing the bill of sale has legal authority to do it. This comes under the "Ask Me How I Know" category, even though I used a "broker". A lawyer's interpretation may not be acceptable to the FAA. You'll need some type of documentation that the person signing the BOS has the authority to do. A death certificate and some other specific (I can't recall now) documentation specifying authority is the only thing the feds will accept. To place your mind at ease call FAA Registrations and ask. You may also use AOPA's escrow service (if it's still around). "Tony Woolner" wrote in message ... Is it more difficult to buy a plane from an estate rather than an owner? There is a broker involved who listed the plane. Thanks, TonyW. |
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On Fri, 11 Jun 2004 07:48:45 -0500, Stu Gotts
wrote: A death certificate and some other specific (I can't recall now) documentation specifying authority is the only thing the feds will accept. To place your mind at ease call FAA Registrations and ask. You may also use AOPA's escrow service (if it's still around). It's my understanding that in general only the legal heir of the item (if the asset is bequeathed directly in the will - get a notarized copy of the relevant page) or the executor of the estate has binding legal authority to sell assets. If the estate is required by law to do so, make sure that it has gone through probate court before buying anything from it. Don't recall offhand whether it can follow down or not, but I would also make sure that they give you something indemnifying you from any subsequent claim from the IRS or other tax authority that will be collecting estate taxes from them incase they don't have enough to pay the taxes. Last thing you need is an unclean title because the IRS is attempting to repo the aircraft to satisfy a tax debit. |
#7
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Tony Woolner wrote:
Is it more difficult to buy a plane from an estate rather than an owner? There is a broker involved who listed the plane. Thanks, TonyW. Besides the good advice you've already received, I will add that an estate will probably be a motivated seller because the executor probably wants to get the estate closed out as quickly as possible with the least amount of hassle. Especially if the executor is not a pilot. The flip side of that is that the estate will probably not be willing to do any repairs or upgrades (but having a broker may help with that). If problems are found in the prebuy, they'd probably rather reduce the price than do the repairs, which can be a good thing or a bad thing, depending. I saw this happen with a house in a neighborhood where I also owned a house. It took a few years for the appraisals for the rest of the neighborhood to recover from the fire-sale price thes estate house was sold for -- but it WAS sold strictly as-is. |
#8
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Thank you, Mr Pepperoni for that bit of wisdom. How many
airplanes have you bought and how many of them had gone thru an estate? The broker is just handling selling it. The Title company isn't going to write the title insurance if there's any hickups in the chain of title. You're still going to have to pay someone to clear any discrepencies before they do that. As Stu points out, the FAA requires certain supporting documentation to accompany a Bill of Sale in some circumstances. If I'm buying something for the price of an airplane then having an attorney make sure I'm not going to run into problems when I go to sell it is a pretty good investment. If an estate is involved then for several reasons that Stu brought up, you need a little more diligence. "Pepperoni" wrote in message ... That's what Brokers and Title Insurance are *FOR*. A lawyer only gives an opinion. Pepperoni "OtisWinslow" wrote in message .. . Have a lawyer make sure the person signing the bill of sale has legal authority to do it. |
#9
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I bought an airplane from a chap who was in a nursing home. His wife signed
it over to me with a legal power of attorney. The power of attorney was completely legitimate and I had supporting documents. The FAA did NOT accept the bill of sale. I finally managed to get a scribbled signature of a bill of sale and get it registered. ( he was in the final stages of Alzheimers) Cheers: Paul |
#10
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