Title Insurance

WHAT IS TITLE INSURANCE IN REAL ESTATE?


When you buy a home, you are given a title to the property, which generally means you receive full legal ownership. Sometimes, there is a hidden mistake in a prior deed, will, mortgage, etc., that may give someone else a valid legal claim against your property!


For new homebuyers, title insurance protects against loss if a covered defect is found in the title to your home. It offers you information on the status of the title to land before you buy or refinance and protects against title claims that may affect the title after you buy. Having title insurance can save you money, time, trouble, even your home!


HOW DOES TITLE INSURANCE WORK?


According to the American Land Title Association, title companies find and fix problems with the title in 25% of transactions - usually without the borrower or lender even knowing it! In addition, title companies pay millions of dollars each year in claims. Title insurance provides significant value to lenders and homeowners.


Before closing, Professional Title Services searches the public records for all matters affecting title. The search entails examining the records in the offices of the Register of Deeds, Clerk of Courts, and other municipal and county officials. These records include recorded documents, judgments, liens, taxes, street easements, sewer assessments, special taxes and other matters that could affect property ownership.


Through careful examination of these records, we determine who owns the property and what interests may already exist in that property. This process, called a title search, provides early warnings of title flaws that must be dealt with before the property can be sold or refinanced.

In those transactions where title insurance is involved, the title company must determine insurability of the title as part of the search process. This leads to the issuance of a title policy, which insures the existence or non-existence of rights to the property.


The title insurance company will, at its own expense, defend the title and will pay losses within the coverage of the policy if they occur.


HOW DOES TITLE INSURANCE DIFFER FROM OTHER TYPES OF INSURANCE?


Title insurance is substantially different from other types of insurance coverage. Title insurance emphasizes risk prevention rather than risk assumption, so the coverage offers the best possible opportunity to avoid claims and losses in real estate transactions.


Because of the important corrective work that title professionals perform, it is rare for lenders or homeowners to suffer a loss under their title insurance policy.


The majority of the title insurance premium goes toward the exhaustive research and due diligence work done by Professional Title Services upfront, while a small percentage goes toward the payment of claims.


Title insurance is charged only once at closing, where other forms of insurance typically require monthly or quarterly payments.


TYPES OF TITLE INSURANCE

There are two types of title insurance: Lender's title insurance and Owner's title insurance.


  1. The Lender's Policy


Most lenders require a loan policy when they issue you a loan. The loan policy is usually based on the dollar amount of your loan. It protects their investment (the mortgage) and protects them against loss should a title problem arise. The policy amount decreases each year and eventually decreases as the loan is paid off.


Lender's title insurance only protects the lender. It does not protect the owner. (FAQ - Doesn't the lender's title insurance protect the homeowner?) No. A lender's policy protects only the lender's interest in the property should a problem arise. It does not cover the owner's equity in the property and will not pay the homeowner's legal expenses if there's a title problem. Only an owner's title insurance policy will protect the homeowner.


    2.  The Owner's Policy


Owner's title insurance is usually issued for the amount of the real estate purchase. You pay a one-time fee at closing and lasts as long as you or your heirs have an interest in the property. This may be even after you have sold the property. Only an owner's title insurance policy fully protects the homeowner should a title problem arise that was not uncovered during the title search. An owner's policy can also protect you by paying for any legal fees involved in defending a claim to your title.


What does an owner's policy provide?


  • Protection from financial loss due to claims against the title to your home, up to the face amount of the title policy.
  • Payment of legal costs if the title insurer has to defend your title against a covered claim.
  • Payment of successful claims against the title to your home covered by the policy, up to the face amount of the policy.

Why You Need It

Chances are, the purchase of real estate is the single largest investment you'll ever make. The loss of such an important investment would be catastrophic. It pays to be certain that the person selling the property has the ownership rights you think you're buying, but that's not always easy to determine.


An owner's rights to property - which often involve family and heirs - are sometimes obscure. There may be other parties (such as government agencies, lenders or private contractors) who also have rights to the property in the form of outstanding claims. How can you be assured that you will be the true owner of the property you're buying? Simply purchase an owner's title policy.


A lender goes to great lengths to minimize the risk of lending money for the purchase of real estate. First, credit is checked as an indication of the borrower's ability to repay the loan. Then, the lender seeks assurance that the quality of the title to the property to be acquired and which will be pledged as security for the loan is satisfactory. The lender does this by obtaining a loan policy of title insurance.


But this policy only protects the lender's interest. It does not protect the borrower. That is why a real estate purchaser needs an owner's policy, which can be issued at the same time as the loan policy usually for a nominal one-time fee.


If The Status of Title is Cleared Before You Buy, Why Do You Still Need Title Insurance?


Because even after the most careful research, some flaws, such as forgery, fraud or confusion due to similar names, may go undetected. These problems may surface at any time in the future.

Protection against future claims is provided by a title insurance policy which is issued after your transaction is complete. Policy terms and conditions determine the extent of coverage provided. This insurance policy insures the condition of title. Separate policies are usually issued to protect the owner's and the lender's interests.

Danger of Loss

If the lender has title insurance protection and the owner does not, what possible danger of loss exits?


As an example, assume real estate was purchased for $100,000. A down payment of $20,000 is made, and a lender holds an $80,000 mortgage lien, or beneficial interest. The lender acquires title insurance protecting its interest up to $80,000. But the purchaser's down payment of $20,000 is not covered.


What if some matter arises affecting the past ownership of the property? The title insurance company would defend and protect the interest of the lender. The purchaser, however, would have to assume the financial burden of his or her own legal defense. If the defense is not successful, the result could be a total loss of title, and the twenty thousand dollar down payment plus any additional equity built up over time.


The title insurance company pays the lender's loss and is entitled to take an assignment of the borrower's debt. The purchaser loses the down payment, other equity in the property that may have accumulated, and the property. And the balance on the loan is still due!

When Refinancing

Mortgage Loans

When you refinance your home, your old loan is paid off and the lender's title policy expires.


Therefore, when you refinance your lender will require a new loan policy on your new mortgage to protect their investment in the property. You will not need a new owner's policy.


WHY DO YOU NEED TO BUY TITLE INSURANCE AGAIN EVEN THOUGH YOU PURCHASED A POLICY WHEN YOU FIRST BOUGHT YOUR HOME AND THERE IS NO CHANGE IN OWNERSHIP?


It's because a separate policy is needed by the lender insuring the validity of your mortgage when it is made.


For as long as you own the property, your policy is valid, but it doesn't insure the new mortgage created when you refinance, and it doesn't provide protection against events that may have transpired between the time you purchased the property and when it is refinanced.


For example, you may have taken out a second mortgage on the home that could threaten the priority of the new lender's mortgage. Or, there could be legal judgments against you or a mechanic's lien against the property by a supplier who wasn't paid for home improvements.


Lenders also insist on a new title policy because many mortgages are packaged as securities and sold to investors in the secondary mortgage market. Title insurance is the only practical way to provide the assurance investors demand and to ensure that the mortgages backing these securities are valid and enforceable.

What It Protects Against


A List of a Few of The Most Common Hidden Risks That Can Cause Loss of Title or Create an Encumbrance on Title:


  • Defective acknowledgements due to improper or expired notary.
  • Conveyances by undisclosed divorced spouses
  • Rights of divorced parties
  • False impersonation of the true owner of the property
  • Forged deeds, releases or wills
  • Undisclosed or missing heirs
  • Instruments executed under invalid or expired power of attorney
  • Mistakes in recording legal documents
  • Misinterpretations of wills and other probate matters
  • Deeds by persons of unsound mind
  • Deeds by minors
  • Deeds by persons supposedly single, but in fact married
  • Liens for unpaid estate, inheritance, income or gift taxes
  • Fraud
  • False affidavits of death or heirship
  • Adverse possession
  • Title searcher's mistakes or omissions
  • Forfeiture of real property due to criminal acts


What Protection Does Title Insurance Provide Against Defects and Hidden Risks?


Title insurance will pay for defending against any lawsuit attacking the title as insured and will either clear up title problems or pay the insured's losses. For a one-time premium, an owner's title insurance policy remains in effect as long as the insured, or the insured's heirs, retain an interest in the property, or have any obligations under a warranty in any conveyance of it. Owner's title insurance, issued simultaneously with a loan policy, is the best title insurance value a property owner can get.

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