With no explanation, chose the best option from "A", "B", "C" or "D". an action in any court ... for the recovery of a commission, fee, or compensation for any act done or service rendered ... which is prohibited under this chapter ... unless the person was duly licensed as a principal broker at the time of the doing of the act or rendering the service. Utah Code Ann. § 61-2-18(1) (2006). URE-BA further prohibits an unlicensed person from acting in the capacity of a "principal real estate broker," id. § 61-2-1, which includes any person "who sells or lists for sale, buys, exchanges, or auctions real estate ... with the expectation of receiving valuable consideration." Id. § 61-2-2(12)(a) (2006). The term "principal real estate broker" includes finders. See generally Diversified Gen. Corp. v. White Barn Golf Course, 584 P.2d 848, 849-51 (Utah 1978) (<HOLDING>). T 12 It is clear from the plain language of

A: holding that a tax appeal on real property is a lien on the real estate and not a personal obligation of the landowner
B: holding that the purchaser could bring a 93a claim against the real estate broker because the broker misinformed the plaintiff as to the acreage of the parcel and failed to disclose that the property was encumbered
C: holding prospectively that a vendees interest in a real estate contract constitutes real estate within the meaning of the judgment lien statute
D: holding that a person who finds a purchaser for a property falls precisely within the statutory definition of a real estate broker
D.