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Stewart Title
840 13th Street
Suite 201
Hempstead, TX 77445
866.721.5117
866.721.5118 FAX |
Chicago Title
7214 F.M. 1488
Suite 108
Magnolia, TX 77354
281.252.4463
281.252.4183 FAX |
Owner's Title Insurance protects against financial loss caused
by covered title risks. The title insurer, without expense to you,
will defend you against an attack on the title to your property
as insured. For a one-time premium, an owner's title insurance
policy remains in effect aslong as you, or your heirs, retain an
interest in the property.
What Is Title Insurance?
Title Insurance insures owners that they are acquiring marketable
title to the property. Unlike casualty insurance policies which
insure against future events, title insurance is designed to
eliminate risk or loss caused by title defects from past events.
Title insurance provides coverage only for title problems that
were 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. If it isn't, and the owner is damaged
at a later date, the title policy covers the insured for loss up
to the face amount of the policy.
Here are just a few of th emost common hidden risks that can cause
a loss of title or create an encumbrance on the title:
- Forgeries
- False misrepresentations
- Inadequate legal descriptions
- Delinquent taxes
- Undisclosed heirs
- Lost wills
- Mistakes in recording legal documents
- Errors in tax records
- Mistakes in the law
- Clerical mistakes
- Documents executed under duress
- Illegal trusts
- Defective Acknowledgements
- Deeds by minors
- Misinterpretation of wills
- Undisclosed or missing heirs
- Deeds to and from defunct corporations
- Marital rights of spouse allegedly, but not legally, divorced
- Deeds by persons supposedly single but secretly married
- Deeds from persons not competent to handle their affairs
What Is A Title Search?
Issuing a title insurance policy is an extensive and exacting process.
Title insurance 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. This is done to determine the current recorded
ownership, recorded liens or encumbrances, and other matters
of record which could affect the title to the property. Once
a title search is complete, the title company issues a Preliminary
Title Report detailing the current status of title.
What Is A Preliminary Title Report?
A Preliminary Title Report contains vital information which may
affect the willingness and the ability of the parties to close
an escrow. Information includes 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 Title Report indicates the type of title insurance
to be offered by the title company, and the exclusions and exceptions
from coverage based on the type of title insurance policy the company
intends to issue. Exclusions and exceptions can include items such
as: recorded deeds of trust, easements, agreements, and covenants
conditions and restrictions, commonly referred to as CC&Rs.
What Should Be Looked For In A Preliminary Title Report?
As your real estate representative, we will review the Preliminary
Title Report as soon as it is issued, paying particular attention
to the following items:
- Verifying 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.
- Verifying that the property address, the plat map, and legal
description all match. An owner could own two properties
adjacent to, or across
the street from, each other, causing confusion in identifying
the correct property.
- Reading the informational notes for pertinent items about
the property, such as: transfer taxes, monument fees, homeowners'
association
fees, etc.
- Carefully reviewing the exceptions. Common exceptions include:
current taxes, bonds, deeds of trust, Mello-Roos Assessment
District items, CC&Rs, and easements. Be sure the CC&Rs
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 at a later date.
- Always looking for surprises. If you can't locate an
easement, or an unexpected deed of trust shows up,
or 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" items. However, the responsibility for early detection
and resolution of problems falls on the entire escrow team,
including the agents, the escrow and title company, and sometimes
the buyers
and sellers as well.
What Is Covered?
Not all risks can be eliminated by a title search, since certain "hidden
defects", such as forgeries, identity of persons, incapacity, incompetency,
and failure to comply with the law, cannot be disclosed by an examination of
the public records. While the Preliminary Title Report is an offer to insure
under certain circumstances, the Title Insurance Policy is a contract, providing
coverage against such "hidden defects." In addition to indemnifying the insured against losses which result
from a covered claim, the policy also provides for legal fees and
defense for future claims against the property.
Extended owners' and lenders' policies of title insurance 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. These include:
- 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 owners and lenders, and
a "plain
language" ALTA Residential Policy is also available
for residential property containing one to four units.
Agents, buyers, and sellers should not assume that all title insurance
policies and title companies are the same. They aren't, and it
is important to ask questions of your title company to determine
the type and cost of coverage available.
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