Contracts
In Connecticut, a purchase and sale agreement should ALWAYS include which of the following to be enforceable?
AA specific closing date
BA legal description of the property adequate to identify it✓ Correct
CThe seller's tax ID number
DThe buyer's Social Security number
Explanation
A real estate contract must describe the property with sufficient certainty to identify it—a legal description is essential. Without a description that clearly identifies the property, the contract may fail under the Statute of Frauds.
Related Connecticut Contracts Questions
- A 'right of first offer' (ROFO) in Connecticut real estate gives the holder the right to:
- A Connecticut home inspection contingency allows the buyer to:
- Which of the following is required for a Connecticut real estate contract to be 'in writing' under the Statute of Frauds?
- A 'contingency' in a Connecticut real estate contract allows:
- A Connecticut buyer signs a purchase and sale agreement and provides a $10,000 earnest money deposit. The buyer discovers a material defect during inspection and invokes the inspection contingency to terminate. The earnest money:
- A Connecticut real estate agent acting as a dual agent cannot do which of the following?
- In Connecticut, specific performance is a legal remedy in a real estate contract dispute that:
- A Connecticut seller accepts an offer on Friday evening. The buyer's agent sends the signed contract by email. The buyer's agent claims the contract is binding upon email delivery. Under the Connecticut UETA (Uniform Electronic Transactions Act):
Practice More Connecticut Real Estate Questions
1,500+ questions covering all exam topics. Start free — no signup required.
Take the Free Connecticut Quiz →