How to lose the title to your home....

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Real Estate

 

Your home has baggage that might jeopardize your ownership  

For most Americans, our home is the single largest investment we will make in our lives. Yet, the underlying legal rights to property in the United States are complicated and there are dozens of ways in which your ownership of the property can be jeopardized. Ironically, while you may purchase homeowners or flood insurance to cover events that may happen in the future, those do not protect you from events that occurred in the past, potentially compromising your ownership.

With all home purchases, a thorough search of the title records is made before the transfer of ownership, but fraud and human error make 100 percent risk elimination impossible. That’s the case even if you’re buying a newly built home! And in most cases, these issues go uncovered until your ownership is challenged in court, you want to refinance, or you decide to sell your home. 

An Owner’s Title Insurance Policy protects your ownership and financial interest in the property for as long as you own it. That means if claims are made against your home after closing that jeopardizes your rights of ownership, you are covered. This includes things like legal fees if you have to go to court to defend your title and any losses you may incur from a successful claim against the property. There are no monthly fees or renewals, it’s just a one-time fee paid at closing that offers protection for you and your heirs for the entire time you own the home. 

The Lender’s Investment is Protected and Yours Should Be Too

Your lender will require that you buy a Lender’s Title Insurance Policy to protect their interests in the property during the time it holds the mortgage. But that does not protect you, the homeowner. The Lender’s Title Insurance Policy protects them only, and with more than 52 ways to lose your ownership, an Owners Title Insurance Policy is worth considering.  

Here’s how you could Lose Title in 52 Ways

  1. Forged original deeds, mortgages, satisfactions or releases
  2. Deed by a minor that may be disclaimed
  3. Deed by a person who is insane or mentally incompetent
  4. Deed forged by family members without the knowledge of owner
  5. Deed signed by mistake, where the grantor did not know what they signed
  6. Deed executed under falsified or expired power of attorney, covering disability or insanity of principal
  7. Deed said to be given under fraud, undue influence or duress
  8. Deed is valid though provided without consent of co-owner
  9. Deed purportedly valid, but actually delivered after the death of grantor/grantee or without consent of grantor
  10. Deed from corporation or partnership that is unauthorized under corporate bylaws or partnership agreement or given under a false corporate resolution
  11. Deed from a purported corporation that has lost its corporate charter
  12. Deed from trustee that is not authorized under trust agreement
  13. Deed from a church, charity or club that is a legal nonentity
  14. Deed from a government entity that may be challenged as unauthorized or unlawful
  15. Deed by a person in a foreign country, where the person can be challenged according to that country’s laws as incompetent, unauthorized or lacking required authority
  16. Claims regarding a person in the chain of title that used an alias or fictitious name
  17. Deed following non-judicial foreclosure, where required procedure was not followed
  18. Deed affecting land in judicial proceedings (bankruptcy, receivership, probate, conservatorship, dissolution of marriage) that are unauthorized by court
  19. Deed affecting property purported to be separate property of grantor that is in fact community or jointly owned property
  20. Undisclosed divorce of someone who transfers title as the sole heir of a deceased former spouse
  21. Deed issued after judicial proceedings that are subject to appeal, further court order or where all necessary parties were not joined
  22. Deed affecting property of deceased person, not joining all heirs
  23. Deed following administration of estate of missing person who later reappears
  24. Discovery of later will after probate of first will or discovery of unknown will after probate
  25. Misinterpretation of will, deed or other instruments
  26. Transfer of property by an heir or survivor of a joint estate who murdered the decedent
  27. Transfer of property that is void because it is in violation of public policy, for example, as payment of gambling debt or for contract to commit crime
  28. Errors in tax record, including mailing tax bill to wrong party resulting in tax sale or crediting payment to wrong property
  29. Erroneous release of tax or assessment liens that are later reinstated to the tax rolls
  30. Deed recorded but not properly indexed so it can be located in the land records
  31. A prior satisfied mortgage that is released without notice of satisfaction due to a bona fide purchase of the note
  32. A prior satisfied mortgage is improperly released due to bankruptcy of creditor prior to the recording of the release or because it was obtained fraudulently by someone earlier in the chain of title
  33. Items that are recorded but undisclosed, including federal or state tax lien; spousal/child support lien; an environmental lien; a prior mortgage; a notice of pending lawsuit affecting the land; an option or right of first refusal to purchase property; covenants or restrictions; or easements for access, utilities, drainage, airspace or views that benefit neighboring land
  34. Undisclosed but recorded boundary, party wall or setback agreements
  35. Special assessments that become liens upon passage of a law or ordinance, but before recorded notice or commencement of improvements of which assessment is made
  36. Adverse claim of vendor’s lien or equitable lien
  37. Erroneous or inadequate legal descriptions
  38. Deed to land without a right of access to a public street or road
  39. Deed to land with legal access subject to undisclosed but recorded conditions or restrictions
  40. Defects in recorded instruments such as failure to attach notarial acknowledgment or a legal description
  41. Defective notary acknowledgment due to expiration of commission
  42. Forged notarization or witness acknowledgment
  43. Deed not properly recorded, for example, recorded with incorrect county, missing pages or other contents, or lacking required payment
  44. Deed to a purchaser from one who has previously sold or leased the same land to a third party under an unrecorded contract, where the third party is in possession of the premises

In some states, you can request extended or additional coverage to protect against defects including:

  1. A right or title established by a long unchallenged tenure that is not in the public record and not disclosed by survey
  2. Physical location of easement (underground pipe or sewer line) that does not conform with easement in the public record
  3. Deed to land with improvements encroaching upon land of another
  4. Incorrect survey that misstates location, dimensions, area easements, or improvements upon land
  5. Mechanics’ lien claims (securing payment of contractors and material suppliers for improvements) that may attach to the property without recorded notice
  6. Federal estate or state inheritance tax liens that may attach without recorded notice
  7. Preexisting violation of subdivision mapping laws or zoning ordinances
  8. Preexisting violation of conditions, covenants, and restrictions affecting the land

Protect Your Home Investment 

An Owner’s Title Insurance Policy is one of the smartest and most affordable insurance protections you can buy. It protects you from unforeseeable circumstances the entire time you own your property. Don’t put your ownership at risk, insist on an Owner’s Title Insurance Policy!