Page 2 of the RPA-CA includes:
-  Closing and Occupancy (cont.) 
-  Allocation of Costs 
-  Statutory Disclosures and Cancellation  Rights 
Examining the Contract - Point for Point (RPA-CA, Page 2)                                               (i) Property shall be vacant. If the property  is tenant-occupied, it is the seller's responsibility to deliver the  property vacant unless otherwise agreed. The Property needs to be vacant  before the scheduled close of escrow so that the buyer may make a final  inspection. The seller has the obligation to comply with lease  requirements, rent control and other laws affecting the landlord/tenant  relationship. If these obligations make vacancy impractical or  impossible, then one of the other options should be checked. 
                        (ii) Tenant to remain in possession: C.A.R.  Form PAA should be used and paragraph 3 checked, to indicate that the  tenants are to continue to occupy the property. 
                        (iii) Contingency: If the buyer and seller  have not agreed whether the tenant should remain or should leave, this  option allows the parties time to come to an agreement. If no agreement  is reached, then either buyer or seller may cancel. 
                                               Third-party warranties are automatically  assigned by the contract on close of escrow. Seller should give buyer  any documentation concerning these warranties. The broker does not  determine assignability of warranties 
                                               Keys and means of opening all locks are to be  delivered to the buyer at the time of possession. The buyer will pay for  HOA key deposits. 
                        . Allocation Of Costs 
                        This paragraph allows the buyer and seller to  determine who is going to pay for particular costs in the transaction.  While custom and practice dictates which party pays for certain costs in  many areas of the state, all of these items are in fact negotiable and  there is no single statewide practice. This paragraph also explicitly  reminds the buyer and seller that it only concerns the cost of the  report, inspection, function or service and not any recommendations made  by the report or inspection or service. Recommended repairs or  services, unless written into this paragraph, are negotiable items. 
                        Al. & 2. Wood  Destroying Pest Inspection
                        Here the parties identify who is responsible  to pay for an inspection for wood destroying pests and organisms and  preparation of the report, including which company is to conduct the  inspection and prepare the report. Be sure to specify if the report will  cover detached garages and carports, decks or other identified  structures. The inspection is for wood destroying pests and organisms  and not all pests (such as rodents or ants, for example). 
                        Roof coverings are not covered. A buyer  wishing to inspect the roof must do so under the investigation of  property, paragraph 9. 
                        If the property is a single unit, condo or  planned development, only the unit itself is inspected, not common  areas. 
                        The report is only applicable to accessible  areas of the property. If the report shows inaccessible areas, and the  buyer wants those areas inspected as well, the buyer may request a  further inspection within the time specified. Since inaccessible areas  are not specifically covered by this paragraph, as with any other item  the buyer wants inspected pursuant to paragraph 9, the buyer is  responsible for the cost. Of course, a buyer who is not satisfied with  the report may exercise a right to cancel pursuant to paragraph 14. A  seller may consider this fact in making a decision to pay or not pay for  the inspection of inaccessible areas. 
                        The Wood Pest Addendum (WPA) has language  similar to that in 4A (1). The differences include: (1) the Wood Pest  Report needs to be separated into section 1 and section 2 recommended  repairs. Section 1 means active infestation or infection by wood  destroying pests or organisms. Section 2 refers to conditions likely to  lead to infestation or infection. These terms are defined in the Buyer's  Inspection Advisory and (2) the addendum gives the parties an  opportunity to decide in advance of the inspection (rather than  negotiating after this information is received) which of them is going  to pay for the cost of the recommended repairs. 
                        A buyer who wants to address the issue of  inaccessible area inspections up front, or pre-determine who is to pay  for recommended repairs may check the box in 4A (2) and use the Wood  Pest Addendum. 
                        Bl. - 5. Other Inspections and Reports  
                        If the buyer pays to have the septic system or  well inspected, it is treated as any other investigation made by the  buyer within the time period for the buyer's investigation. The buyer  has the right to request that the seller make repairs within the  designated number of days after receipt of the inspection report. 
                        The paragraph determines if either party will  pay for zone disclosure reports such as earthquake fault, seismic, flood  and fire zones, and who will provide those reports. Private companies  are available which, for a fee, provide zone disclosure reports on  property transactions. 
                        Two paragraphs have been added to write in  common inspections for particular areas or types of properties. 
                        Cl. & 2. Government Requirements  and Retrofit 
                        Smoke detector installation and water heater  bracing requirements apply whether or not a property is for sale.  However, the parties are free to negotiate who will pay for compliance  of these requirements. Regardless of who pays, unless exempt, a  statement of compliance is required to be signed by the seller and  delivered to the buyer. 
                        Here the parties specify who will pay for  mandatory retrofit. Many communities require retrofit to be made as a  condition of closing. Examples include the installation of low flow  toilets and showers heads, weather stripping, and tempered glass in  showers or sliding doors. Check with your city or county for local  mandatory retrofit. 
                        Dl. & 2. Escrow and Title Costs 
                        Here the parties designate who is to pay for  the title policy and escrow fees as well as who will provide those  services. The title policy referenced here is for an owner's policy. The  buyer is to pay for any required lender's title policy unless otherwise  agreed. 
                        The owner's title policy is clarified in  paragraph 12. 
                        Escrow fee refers only to the "bare" escrow  fee and does not involve items such as notary fee, document fee,  recording, etc. For VA transactions, the seller must pay the entire  escrow fee.
                        El.-7. Other Costs 
                        In this section the parties designate who is  to pay for county and/or city transfer fees. If a particular cost is  going to be split, check both boxes and write that down in the blank  line following the tax or fee. 
                        The county transfer tax is $.55 per $500. Half  of that fee goes to the county and the other half goes to the city,  unless the city has a separate transfer fee, in which case the county  keeps the entire amount. 
                        The city transfer tax or fee is set by the  city. It is a fee charged upon sale (transfer) of property in addition  to the county transfer fee. 
                        Homeowner Association's fees and the cost,  coverage and provider of a home warranty plan are covered. 
                        Here the parties identify who is issuing a  home warranty plan, if any, who is going to pay for it, and the limits  on coverage and cost. Additional lines have been provided for other cost  items that are common to the area or property. 
                        5. Statutory Disclosures (Including  Lead-Based Paint Hazard Disclosures) And Cancellation Rights 
                        A.I California law creates a  requirement for all sellers of one-to-four residential units (including  lease options), unless exempt, to deliver to a buyer two mandated forms:  a Transfer Disclosure Statement (TDS) and a Natural Hazards Disclosure  (NHD) Statement, created by the legislature. If the property is in a  Mello-Roos District, or subject to an assessment pursuant to the  Improvement Bond Act of 1915, the seller must make a good faith effort  to obtain a disclosure notice from the taxing authority and to deliver  such notice to the buyer. Nothing in the law imposes a duty to discover a  special tax or district not actually known to the agents. A Mello-Roos  District is created under the Mello-Roos Community Facilities Act, which  authorizes the district to issue bonds and levy special taxes to  finance designated public facilities and services. 
                        Additionally, if the seller has actual  knowledge that there has been a release of illegal substances on the  property or if the property is in or affected by an industrial use zone  (a zone or district allowing manufacturing, commercial or airport use)  or is located within one mile of a former military ordnance location  which may contain potentially explosive munitions, this fact must be  disclosed to the buyer. Seller exemptions from the TDS and NHD forms,  and these other obligations include: 
                       -  Properties covered by a public report.  (Re-sales cannot use this exemption.) 
-  Court ordered sales (i.e., probate,  bankruptcy, etc.). 
-  Foreclosure, deed in lieu, REO properties. 
-  Transfers between co-owners or spouses. 
 Federal law requires sellers of all  residential properties constructed prior to 1978 to provide a buyer with  a Lead-Based Paint notice as an attachment to the contract, a  disclosure of known lead paint, lead hazard reports, and a lead pamphlet  (either the separate federal lead booklet or the state Environmental  Hazards Booklet.) 
                        The TDS and NHD are not warranties, nor are  they a part of the contract. Do not attach them as supplements to the  contract or the counter-offer. 
                        Disclosures in the TDS do not eliminate the  seller's obligations to disclose all known material facts. 
                        NOTE: Some areas have "local option"  disclosures, which are required by local ordinance. 
                        A.2 The buyer is  contractually obligated to return the statutory disclosure forms within a  specified period. This way the seller knows that the disclosures have  been received and can determine if the statutory right to rescind has  expired. 
                        A.3 This part of the clause  provides that if a seller becomes aware of adverse material conditions  of which the buyer is otherwise unaware, the seller will give the buyer a  subsequent or amended written disclosure unless the condition is  disclosed in a report obtained by the buyer.