southernskies said:
You are looking at the situation from a legal standpoint. Nobody disagrees that the agreement/offer is valid as it stands. That's not the point I'm making but that is the entirety of your counter argument.
I'm looking at it in a moral sense. Would you feel the same way if this deal happened between you and your best friend? Or your sibling? I would assume you wouldn't. That is my stance here. Because it's a stranger though morals go out the window and it's only looked at through a legalistic lens. I'm not discounting the win or value added. But I do feel bad for the seller if this was a retirement plan or inheritance that was meant to be passed on. He placed his trust in his agent and now his life plans could be forever altered. I don't understand how the empathy here would be construed as a troll.
Ok, I get it. I understand your point. I don't agree but I understand.
From a legal standpoint, it's valid.
From a moral standpoint, it's definitley valid. A deal was offered. A deal was accepted. Is it morally OK to crawfish the deal for the buyer? Of course not. The deal is the deal.
From an emotional standpoint, sure, we can feel bad for the seller that didn't read and his agent that didn't do his job. But, that's not anyone's problem and that broker probably has E&O. Maybe that will play into it, I don't know.
If it was my friend or my sibling, I'd rib my friend until he died and I'd rib my sibling for a while and then treat them like a baby and explain why they ****ed up and why it's completely their fault and the best thing to do is learn from it and not do it again. My sibling is very naive in real estate and the fact is, if they had a realtor, they'd still defer to me to check a contract. It's just prudent.
I HIGHLY doubt this seller lost his minerals from his 500 acres in the Permian. If the minerals were that important, they'd have triple checked that contract.