CanadaRealEstateDirectory.com

   
 
CanadaRealEstateDirectory.com
 
Advertising
Send us your advertising inquiry
Article Resources
Email us your articles
Recently Added Articles:
Apartment Search
When you are apartment hunting, prepare a rental search plan. Be sure to know in advance what you want in an apartment and what you can live without.

Listing Your House For Sale By Owner
Houses for sale by owner are more common than ever.

Real Estate Investing is Just Like Weight Loss...
It takes a lot of effort on your part (but a guru or two can help).
 
Real Estate Agents

Letting brokers speak: real estate and free speech

by: Jacob Sullum

USUALLY WHEN A court refuses to recognize a privilege for professional journalists, it's seen as a defeat for the First Amendment. In one recent case, it was an unambiguous victory. In November a federal judge overturned a California law requiring any business that earns money by listing homes for sale to obtain a real estate broker's license--unless the business happens to be a newspaper.

The distinction, presumably motivated by a desire to avoid the appearance of infringing on freedom of the press, never really made sense, and with the advent of the Internet its absurdity became glaringly obvious. In response to a lawsuit filed by the Institute for Justice on behalf of ForSaleByOwner.com, U.S. District Judge Morrison C. England noted that "many newspapers now maintain websites operating in much the same manner as the site generated by FSBO"--charging property owners for listings and offering information and advice for buyers and sellers. Noting that "the distinction drawn between the two publishing mediums appears wholly arbitratry," England concluded that "California's real estate licensing scheme impermissibly differentiates between certain types of publications canting the same basic content."

In finding that the content of ForSaleByOwner.com was fully protected by the First Amendment, England cited a 1999 decision (also the result of an Institute for Justice suit) in which the U.S. District Court in D.C. rejected a federal licensing requirement for people who publish advice about commodity trading. Both cases involved the regulation of speech under the pretext of regulating professional services.

  Home | About Us | Submit a Site | Link to us | Contact us
Information contained herein is deemed accurate and correct, but no warranty is implied or given.
Copyright ©1999-2005 CanadaRealEstateDirectory.com, Inc., All rights reserved.

 
nt