EXAM 2026/2027 Complete Questions and
Answers Detailed Rationales Pass Guaranteed -
A+ Graded
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Section 1 | Contract Formation and Essential Elements | Q1 – Q10
Section 2 | Contract Types in Real Estate Transactions | Q11 – Q20
Section 3 | Performance, Breach, and Remedies | Q21 – Q30
Section 4 | Third-Party Rights, Disclosures, and Contingencies | Q31 – Q40
Section 5 | Statute of Frauds, Recording Acts, and Termination | Q41 – Q50
Instructions: Choose the single best answer. Pass: 80% in 90 minutes.
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SECTION 1: CONTRACT FORMATION AND ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS Q1 – Q10
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Question 1 of 50
Margaret Whitfield, a 62-year-old widow, orally agrees to sell her lakeside cottage to her
neighbor, Tom Brennan, for $185,000 during a casual conversation over the backyard
fence. Tom immediately hands Margaret a $5,000 check as earnest money, which she
deposits that afternoon. Three days later, Margaret's adult children convince her the
price is too low, and she refuses to sign any written agreement. Tom sues for specific
performance.
A. The oral contract is fully enforceable because earnest money was exchanged and
accepted.
,B. The agreement fails for lack of consideration since $5,000 is inadequate earnest
money for the purchase price.
C. The contract is unenforceable under the Statute of Frauds because it involves the
sale of real estate and lacks a writing. ✓ CORRECT
D. Tom can enforce the agreement through partial performance because he relied on
Margaret's promise to his detriment.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Contracts for the sale of real estate fall squarely within the Statute of Frauds
and require a signed writing to be enforceable, regardless of earnest money exchange
or oral agreement. Option A is tempting because earnest money creates a sense of
commitment, but partial payment alone does not satisfy the writing requirement for land
sales in any jurisdiction. Buyers who hand over earnest money without a signed contract
are among the most common casualties in real estate litigation.
Question 2 of 50
Carlos Mendez, a 34-year-old real estate investor, sends a signed letter to Angela Brooks
offering to purchase her commercial warehouse for $420,000, with the offer expiring in
14 days. Angela receives the letter on Monday, considers it for a week, and mails her
signed acceptance on the 13th day. Carlos receives the acceptance on the 16th day and
claims the offer had already lapsed.
A. The acceptance is valid because Angela dispatched it within the offer's stated time
period under the mailbox rule.
B. The acceptance is invalid because Carlos specified a firm expiration date and did not
receive acceptance by then.
C. Angela's acceptance is effective upon dispatch, and Carlos is bound to the contract.
✓ CORRECT
D. The offer lapsed automatically because 14 days passed without Carlos receiving a
response.
Correct Answer: C
,Rationale: Under the mailbox rule, acceptance is effective upon proper dispatch, not
upon receipt, so Angela's timely mailing on day 13 creates a binding contract even
though Carlos received it after expiration. Option B seems logical because expiration
dates feel absolute, but the mailbox rule specifically protects the offeree who acts in
good faith within the time window. Investors who set short acceptance windows often
misunderstand this doctrine and find themselves contractually bound despite delayed
receipt.
Question 3 of 50
Diane Harrington, a 45-year-old developer, enters negotiations to buy a 12-acre parcel
from the Russo family. During a site visit, the Russos point out the property boundaries
and mention that "the old well still works fine." Diane relies on this statement, does not
order a survey, and later discovers the well is on the adjacent property and belongs to a
third party. She seeks to rescind the contract.
A. Diane can rescind based on fraudulent misrepresentation because the Russos
knowingly lied about the well's location.
B. Diane can rescind based on mutual mistake since both parties believed the well was
on the Russo property.
C. Diane can rescind based on innocent misrepresentation because the Russos'
statement was false and induced her to forgo a survey. ✓ CORRECT
D. Diane has no remedy because she failed to exercise due diligence by ordering an
independent survey.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Innocent misrepresentation occurs when a false statement of material fact is
made without knowledge of its falsity but induces detrimental reliance, which supports
rescission even without fraud. Option A is tempting because the result feels unfair, but
there is no evidence the Russos knew the well was off-property, and fraud requires
intent to deceive. Buyers who skip surveys based on seller statements frequently learn
this distinction the hard way in boundary disputes.
, Question 4 of 50
Robert Chen, a 29-year-old first-time homebuyer, signs a purchase agreement for a
condominium after his agent assures him the building has "no pending special
assessments." In fact, the association had approved a $25,000 per unit elevator
modernization assessment three weeks earlier, which the agent had overlooked in an
email. Robert discovers this after closing and wants out of the deal.
A. Robert can rescind the contract because the agent's statement constitutes
promissory estoppel.
B. Robert is bound by the contract because he failed to read the association's meeting
minutes before closing.
C. Robert can rescind based on unilateral mistake induced by the agent's negligent
misrepresentation. ✓ CORRECT
D. Robert has no claim because the agent's statement was an opinion, not a statement
of fact.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: A unilateral mistake about a material fact, induced by another party's
negligent misrepresentation, provides grounds for rescission when the mistaken party
relied reasonably on the information provided. Option B appeals to the principle of
caveat emptor, but courts recognize that buyers reasonably rely on agent
representations about material conditions affecting value. First-time buyers are
particularly vulnerable to agent oversights about association finances, which is why due
diligence clauses are critical in condominium purchases.
Question 5 of 50
Helen Okafor, a 58-year-old attorney, is selling her law office building to a young
associate. During negotiations, Helen mentions she has received two other offers but
does not disclose that both offers fell through weeks ago due to financing issues. The