Title Insurance
Below is an article that explains what Title Insurance is,
the different types of policies and why Title Insurance exists
in the United States. We have provided this information to
better inform you on Title Insurance, yet these are only brief
summary explanations simply for general information purposes.
For more specific information regarding Title Insurance and
available policies, we recommend contacting the following Companies
located here in Park City:
Title Insurance
Insurance"insurance against loss
from defects in real property and from the invalidity or
unenforceability of mortgage liens. It is available in many
countries but it is principally a product developed and sold
in the United States. It is meant to protect an owner's or
lender's financial interest in real property against loss
due to title defects, liens or other matters. It will defend
against a lawsuit attacking the title as it is insured, or
reimburse the insured for the actual monetary loss incurred,
up to the dollar amount of insurance provided by the policy.
Typically the real property interests insured are fee
simple ownership or a mortgage.
However, title insurance can be purchased to insure any interest
in real property, including an Heasement,
lease
or life
estate. Just as lenders require fire
insurance and other types of insurance coverage to protect
their investment, nearly all institutional lenders also require
title insurance to protect their interest in the collateral
of loans secured by real estate. Some mortgage lenders, especially
non-institutional lenders, may not require title insurance.
The following focuses on title insurance as issued in the
United
States.
Types of policies
Standardized forms of title insurance exist for owners and
lenders. The lender's policies include a form specifically
for construction loans, though this is rarely used today.
Owner's policy
The owner's policy insures a purchaser
that the title to the property is vested in that purchaser
and that it is free from all defects, liens and encumbrances
except those which are listed as exceptions in the policy
or are excluded from the scope of the policy's coverage.
It also covers losses and damages suffered if the title
is unmarketable [2]
The policy also provides coverage for loss if there is
no right of access to the land. Although these are the
basic coverages, expanded forms of residential owner's
policy exist that cover additional items of loss.
The liability limit of the owner's policy is typically the
purchase price paid for the property. As with other types of
insurance, coverages can also be added or deleted with an endorsement.
There are many forms of standard endorsements to cover a variety
of common issues. The premium for the policy may be paid by
the seller or buyer as the parties agree; usually there is
a custom in a particular state or county on this matter which
is reflected in most local real estate contracts. Consumers
should inquire about the cost of title insurance before signing
a real estate contract which provide that they pay for title
charges. A real estate attorney, broker, escrow
officer (in the western states), or loan officer can provide
detailed information to the consumer as to the price of title
search and insurance before the real estate contract is signed.
Title insurance coverage lasts as long as the insured retains
an interest in the land insured and typically no additional
premium is paid after the policy is issued.
Lender's policy
This is sometimes called a loan policy and it is issued only
to mortgage lenders. Generally speaking, it follows the assignment
of the mortgage loan, meaning that the policy benefits the
purchaser of the loan if the loan is sold. For this reason,
these policies greatly facilitate the sale of mortgages into
the secondary market. That market is made up of high volume
purchasers such as Fannie Mae and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corporation as well as private institutions.
The American Land Title Association
("ALTA") forms
are almost universally used in the country though they have
been modified in some states. In general, the basic elements
of insurance they provide to the lender cover losses from the
following matters:
- The title to the property on which the mortgage is being
made is either
- • Not in the mortgage loan
borrower
- Subject
to defects, liens or encumbrances, or
- Unmarketable
- There is no right of access to the land.
- The lien created by the mortgage:
- is invalid or unenforceable
- is not prior to any other lien existing on the property
on the date the policy is written, or
- is subject to mechanic's liens under certain circumstances.
As with all of the ALTA forms, the policy also covers
the cost of defending insured matters against attack.
Elements 1 and 2 are important to the lender because they
cover its expectations of the title it will receive if it must
foreclose its mortgage. Element 3 covers matters that will
interfere with its foreclosure.
Of course, all of the policies except or exclude certain matters
and are subject to various conditions.
There are also ALTA mortgage policies covering single or one-to-four
family housing mortgages. These cover the elements of loss
listed above plus others. Examples of the other coverages are
loss from forged releases of the mortgage and loss resulting
from encroachments of improvements on adjoining land onto the
mortgaged property when the improvements are constructed after
the loan is made.
Construction loan policy
In many states, separate policies exist for construction loans.
Title insurance for construction loans require a Date Down
endorsement which recognizes that the insured amount for
the property has increased due to construction funds that
have been vested into the property.
Why Title Insurance Exists in the United States
Title insurance exists in the US in great part because of
a comparative deficiency in the US land records laws. Most
of the industrialized world uses land registration systems
for the transfer of land titles or interests in them. Under
these systems, the government makes the determination of title
ownership and encumbrances on the title based on the registration
of the instruments transferring or otherwise affecting the
title in the applicable government office. With only a few
exceptions, the government's determination is conclusive. Governmental
errors lead to monetary compensation to the person damaged
by the error but that aggrieved party usually cannot recover
the property.
A few jurisdictions in the United States have adopted a form
of this system, e.g., Minneapolis,
Minnesota and Boston,
Massachusetts. However, for the most part, the states have
opted for a system of document recording in which no governmental
official makes any determination of who owns the title or whether
the instruments transferring it are valid. The reason for this
is probably that it is much less expensive to operate than
a land registration system; it doesn't require the number of
legally skilled employees that the registration systems do.
Greatly simplified, in the recording
system, each time a land title transaction takes place, the
transfer instrument is recorded with a local government recorder
located in the jurisdiction (usually the county) where the
land lies. The instrument is then indexed by the names of the
grantor (transferor) and the grantee (transferee) and photographed
so it can be found and examined by anyone who wants to see
it. Usually, the failure by the grantee to record the transfer
instrument voids it as to subsequent purchasers of the property
who don't actually know of its existence.
Under this system, determining who owns the title requires
the examination of the indexes in the recorders' offices pursuant
to various rules established by state legislatures and courts,
scrutinizing the instruments to which they refer and making
the determination of how they affect the title under applicable
law. (The final arbiters of title matters are the courts, which
make decisions in suits brought by parties having disagreements.)
Initially, this was done by hiring an abstractor to search
for the documents affecting the title to the land in question
and an attorney to opine on their meaning under the law, and
this is still done in some places. However, this procedure
has been found to be cumbersome and inefficient in most of
the US. Substantial errors made by the abstractor or the attorney
will be compensated only to the limit of the financial responsibility
of these parties (including their liability insurance). Some
errors may not be compensated at all, depending on whether
the error was the result of negligence.[1]
The opinions given by attorneys as to each title are not uniform
and often require time consuming analysis to determine their
meanings.
Title insurers use this recording system to produce an insurance
policy for any purchaser of land, or interest in it, or mortgage
lender if the premium is paid. Title insurers use their employees
or agents to perform the necessary searches of the recorders'
offices records and to make the determinations of who owns
the title and to what interests it is subject. The policies
are fairly uniform (a fact that greatly pleases lenders and
others in the real estate business) and the insurers carry,
at a minimum, the financial reserves required by insurance
regulation to compensate their insureds for valid claims they
make under the policies. This is especially important in large
commercial real estate transactions where many millions of
dollars are invested or loaned in reliance on the validity
of real estate titles. As stated above, the policies also require
the insurers to pay for the costs of defense of their insureds
in legal contests over what they have insured. Abstractors
and attorneys have no such obligation.
Comparison with other insurance
Title insurance differs in several
respects from other types of insurance.
Where most insurance is a contract where the insurer indemnifies
or guarantees another party against a possible specific type
of loss (such as an accident or death) at a future date, title
insurance generally insures against losses caused by title
problems that have their source in past events. This often
results in the curing of title defects or the elimination of
adverse interests from the title before a transaction takes
place. Title insurance companies attempt to achieve this by
searching public records to develop and document the chain
of title and to detect known claims against or defects in the
title to the subject property. If liens or encumbrances are
found, the insurer may require that steps be taken to eliminate
them (for example, obtaining a release of an old mortgage or
deed of trust that has been paid off, or requiring the payoff)
before issuing the title policy. In the alternative, it may "except" those
items not eliminated from coverage. Title plants are sometimes
maintained to index the public records geographically, with
the goal of increasing searching efficiency and reducing claims.
The explanation above discloses another difference between
title insurance and other types: title insurance premiums are
not principally calculated on the basis of actuarial
science, as is true in most other types of insurance. Instead
of correlating the probability of losses with their projected
costs, title insurance seeks to eliminate the source of the
losses through the use of the recording system Recording
(real estate)) and other underwriting practices. As a result,
a relatively small fraction of title insurance premiums are
used to pay insured losses. The great majority of the premiums
are used to finance the title research on each piece of property
and to maintain the title plants used to efficiently do that
research. There is significant social utility in this approach
as the result conforms with the expectations of most property
purchasers and mortgage lenders. Generally, they want the real
estate they purchased or loaned money on to have the title
condition they expected when they entered the transaction,
rather than money compensation and litigation over unexpected
defects.
Land title associations
In the United States, the American
Land Title Association (ALTA) is a national trade association
of title insurers. ALTA has created standard forms of title
insurance policy "jackets" (standard terms and conditions)
for Owner's, Lender's and Construction Loan policies. ALTA
forms are used in most, but not all, U.S.
states. ALTA also offers special endorsement forms for the
various policies; endorsements amend and typically broaden
the coverage given under a basic title insurance policy. ALTA
does not issue title insurance; they provide the policy forms
that title insurers issue.
Some states, including Texas
and New
York, may mandate the use of forms of title insurance policy
jackets and endorsements approved by the state insurance commissioner
for properties located in those jurisdictions, but these forms
are usually similar or identical to ALTA forms.
While title insurance generally insures
owners and lenders against things that have occurred in the
past, in some limited circumstances, in some states, coverage
is available for certain events that can occur after a title
insurance policy is issued. Most notably, coverage is now
available that includes the risk that a third party may place
a forged mortgage or deed of trust against a property after
the owner's policy has been issued. This coverage is included
in the "Homeowners Policy of
Title Insurance" (a specific policy form), published by
ALTA and the California
Land Title Association (CLTA). Note that this is not the same
as a so-called CLTA Standard Policy, which provides much less
coverage than the Homeowners Policy of Title Insurance.
-Source of article, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Title_insurance
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