Why do you need a title companyand what does it provide to you.
The key word is protection. Title to real estate, in the simplest form, is a detailed
history of past ownership of the land, showing liens, encumbrances and the rights that
others may have which may affect the use of the land.
Throughout the sale and closing process the
title company acts to insure that you are protected, beginning with placing the title in
order and continuing through the commitment phase, closing scenario and issuance of the
title insurance policy.
Once a title order is placed, the search,
examination and disclosure process begins. The courthouse abstractor searches the public
records and prepares a detailed brief which is translated into a title
"commitment" by the title officer. This commitment advises you that the Title
Company is committed to insure the property subject to certain requirements.
These requirements involve items showing the
present state of the title and the removal of objections are open mortgages and taxes.
Other items may involve estate questions, survey matters, superior court or county
judgements, foreclosure items and bankruptcy issues. The title company assists throughout
the pre-closing period in determining ways of resolving any issue appearing on the title
commitment. Since most of the items appearing on the commitment are items concerning the
seller of the property, the title report serves as disclosure to you in an effort to
protect your interests.
At the closing table, the title company
representatives (called "settlement officers" or "closers") continue
to protect your interests. All title matters still of concern are resolved at the final
settlement. Liens and encumbrances are listed on the settlement statement (called the
"HUD-1") and paid out of the proceeds of the sale. Documents and various
exhibits are accepted to clear items still appearing on the commitment. Completion of the
HUD-1 and disbursement of the funds are fiduciary activities that are also provided to you
by the title company. The Passing of the funds through the title company provides
protection to you and reinforces faith and trust in the closing process.
After closing, little thought is given to the
title company, but this is perhaps the period when the most protection is provided. With
the rapid recording of documents and issuance of an Owners Policy of Title
Insurance, you are given written protection against challenges and claims to ownership of
the land.
National title insurance companies, also
called title underwriters, pay out multi-millions of dollars in claims each year,
protecting the ongoing ownership of land. Among the common types of claims handled are:
1) Forgeries in the chain of title previously
undiscovered or claims. 2) Boundary line disputes caused by conflicting surveys, plots
plans or subdivision plans (a common claim in South Jersey). 3) Inaccurate lien payoff
information. 4) Courthouse errors resulting in missed liens. 5) "Gap"
liens---those that get recorded after settlement, but prior to the insured deed. 6)
Violations of setbacks and restrictions. 7) Previously undisclosed heirs. 8) Competency
issues. And last but not least, 9) Fraud.
All Mortgage lenders require that buyers have
a title policymade payable to the lenderto cover the loan amount. But most do
not require a second policy to protect the buyer.
Still, it might be a good idea to buy that
second policy, according to some experts. Under certain conditions, a lenders policy
may not protect the owner from losses.
The lenders policy given the lender
first claim to any money collected from title insurance, even though the buyer pays for
the policy. The lenders policy usually is for the amount of the loan, and the
coverage decreases as the mortgage is paid off.
The buyers policy, on the other hand,
usually is for the full value of the property and lasts as long as the buyer owns the
house, even longer in some cases. It compensates the buyer for any losses not covered by
the lenders policy.