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Title Insurance… An
Overview The home buying process is as exhilarating as it
is stressful. As these emotions play out, often times certain inherent safety
precautions are enacted to insure the best handling of your home buying
transaction. Home Inspection is one such exercise used a necessary tool to
determine the overall condition of the home. Title Insurance is another
important endeavor that serves to ensure, you’re the buyer that there are no
liens placed against the prior owners or any documents that will restrict your
use of the property. A preliminary title report provides you with
an opportunity to review any impediment that would prevent clear title from
passing to you. When reading a preliminary report, it is important
to check the extent of your ownership rights or interest. The most common form
of interest is 'fee simple' or 'fee,' which is the highest type of interest an
owner can have in land.
Liens, restrictions and interests of others
excluded from title coverage will be listed numerically as exceptions in the
report. You also may have to consider interests of any third
parties, such as easements granted by prior owners that limit use of the
property. Some buyers attempt to clear these unwanted items prior to purchase.
A list of standard exceptions and exclusions
not covered by the title insurance policy may be attached. This section includes
items the buyer may want to investigate further, such as any laws governing
building and zoning.
What is Title
Insurance? Title Insurance assures property owners that they are
acquiring marketable title. Unlike casualty insurance policies, which insure
against future events, title insurance is designed to eliminate risk or loss
caused by defects in title from past events. Title insurance provides coverage
only for title problems that were already in existence at the time the policy
was issued. A title insurance policy is a contract of indemnity
that guarantees that the title is as reported, and if it is not and the owner is
damaged, the title policy covers the insured for his/her loss up to the face
amount of the policy.
The Title Search Issuing
a title policy is an extensive and exacting process. Title companies work to
eliminate risks by performing a painstaking search of the public records or the
title company’s own “plant” where public records, laws and court decisions
pertaining to the property and the parties to the escrow are maintained, to
determine the current recorded ownership, and recorded liens or encumbrances, or
other matters of record which could affect the title to the property. Once a
title search is complete, the title company issues a preliminary report
detailing the current status of title. The Preliminary
Report This contains vital information which may affect the
willingness and the ability of the parties to close the escrow: ownership of the
subject property, the manner in which the current owners hold title, matters of
record which specifically affect the subject property or the owners of the
property, as well as a legal description of the property and an informational
plat map. The preliminary report indicates the type of title
insurance offered by the title company and the exclusions and exceptions from
coverage subject to which the policy will be issued, such as recorded deeds of
trust, easements, agreements, and covenants, conditions and restrictions
(CC&R’s), etc.
What to Look For As
your Real Estate representative, I will review the preliminary report as soon as
it arrives, with particular attention to certain areas:
- Verify the ownership vesting by insuring
that the names on the report are the same as the names on the purchase
contract. Sometimes the name of an unexpected owner will appear (i.e., a
previous spouse or relative who died), and corrective documents may be
required.
- Verify the property address. The plat map
and legal description should match the address. An owner could own 2
properties adjacent to or across the street from each other, causing confusion
in identifying the correct property.
- Read the informational notes for pertinent
items about the property, i.e. transfer taxes, monument fees, homeowners’
association fees, etc.
- Carefully review the exceptions. Common
exceptions include current taxes, bonds, deeds of trust, Mello-Roos assessment
district items, CC&R’s and easements. Be sure the CC&R’s or existing
easements don’t interfere with the buyer’s future plans. For example, an
easement across the backyard could have a profound effect on the buyer’s
ability to add a swimming pool later.
Always look for surprises. If you can’t
locate an easement; if an unexpected deed of trust shows up; if you see an item
you weren’t aware of before, immediately call the escrow officer or title
company to discuss the matter. The title company should be a problem solver and
top-notch escrow officers and title companies go out of their way to resolve
quickly the majority of “red flag” areas. However, the responsibility for early
detection and resolution of problems falls on the entire escrow team: the
agents, the escrow and title companies and sometimes the buyers and sellers as
well.
What's Covered? Not
all risks can be eliminated by a title search, since certain “hidden defects”
like forgeries, identity of persons, incapacity, incompetency, and failure to
comply with the law, cannot be disclosed by an examination of the public
records. Where the preliminary report is an offer to insure under certain
circumstances, the title policy is a contract, providing coverage against such
“hidden defects.” In addition to indemnifying the insured against
losses, which result from covered claim, the policy also provides for legal fees
and defense against future claims against the property. Extended
owner’s and lender’s policies provide broader coverage and are available through
the American Land Title Association (ALTA). Coverage is extended to certain
matters that are off-record but which are generally discoverable by an
inspection of the property or by questioning the parties in possession, such as:
- Unrecorded liens and encumbrances
- Unrecorded easements
- Unrecorded rights of parties in
possession
- Encroachments, discrepancies or conflicts in the
boundary lines.
ALTA policies are available for lenders or
owners and a “plain language” ALTA Residential Policy is also available for
residential property of one to four units.
Realtors, buyers and sellers
should not assume that all title policies and title companies are the same.
They’re not, and it is important to ask questions of your title company to
determine the type and cost of coverage available.
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