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Title
Insurance
Ownership of land
can be passed from one person to another in several ways. A landowner
can be granted full ownership for a pre-determined period of time (e.g.,
his own or someone else's lifetime); he/she can be given the land with
certain conditions (e.g., no gambling can ever take place on the land,
or, it must always be used for church purposes); or he/she can be granted
full ownership for an indefinite amount of time, complete with the right
to pass the land on to his/her heirs.
Ownership is evidenced
through a document called a title, and for every piece of property there
should be a consistent chain of title showing who owned the land at all
times. Before your lender will extend credit for your mortgage, he/she
is going to want to know the history of the title to your property. It
may be that there are gaps in the chain - a period where no title seems
to have existed for the land. If that's the case, someone else could come
along later, produce a valid title, and claim the land you now "own."
Or, there may be a condition on the land that makes it illegal for you
to have your home there. Or, the property owner thirty years ago may have
defaulted on his taxes so that the government really owns the land you're
trying to buy. Obviously, you, and your lender, need to know up front
exactly what you're getting when you buy this land - if you really can
buy it.
To this end, once
you have a loan commitment, your lender will order a title search from
a title company. (The seller pays for the search in his/her closing costs.)
The title company will research public records to trace the title back
40-60 years (considered the "root" of the title). If your title
is marketable - it has no serious defects, doesn't expose you as the buyer
to the possibility of future litigation, and can be transferred at your
discretion - the title company will produce a certificate of title which
certifies the results of the search. This does not guarantee your ownership,
however; problems could still surface later.
To protect yourself
against past problems that may surface sometime in the future, you will
purchase a title insurance policy at your closing. This policy will protect
you from
- Defects that could
be found in public records
- Forged documents
- Incompetent grantors
(e.g., a past title wasn't valid because the person who conveyed wasn't
legally competent to do so)
- Incorrect marital
statements, and
- Improperly delivered
deeds.
Title insurance does
not protect you against defects that were known at the time of your purchase
and were listed in the policy.
Next>>
F.C. Tucker
on "Buying Your First Home" |