The Newport Plain Talk
Pretty As A Picture Visiting The Smokies Info Guide
Obituaries Obituaries Archive
Subscribe Today! Learn More About:
Search: Recent News Archives or try Advanced Search
CURRENT CONDITIONS
Light Snow Light Snow
36 °
Click For Extended Forecast



PARADE MAGAZINE

December 01, 2008

choose text size bigger text smaller text

Mortgage Lending: No Title Insurance? No Moola…

Published: 3:10 AM, 05/27/2008 Last updated: 3:07 AM, 05/27/2008
 

Author: Kristin Abouelata
Source: The Newport Plain Talk

So, you’re sitting across from your mortgage lender going over all the charges for your mortgage. It seems like there are countless charges for this (document preparation) and that (MERS assignment fee - what the heck is MERS again?). But, none of these little charges are that big. But, whoa, wait a minute! What’s that on line 1108? Title insurance? Do you really need it since you’re putting 20% down on the property? Is that a double charge for the insurance you’re getting in case your house burns down? What exactly does it do for you?

 

Truth be told, title insurance as required by the lender doesn’t do a whole lot for you as a borrower. But it does a heck of a lot for the lender. Title insurance protects from loss against problems arising from problems with the title. If you are being lent money to buy or refinance your home, your lender is going to require it. Before you came along and put down a contract on the house you want to buy, there have possibly been numerous people who owned the house or at least the property it sits upon. The house may have changed hands countless times. And if the parties conducting the transaction before yours made a boo-boo, it could mean the world to you and your wallet. Which in turn, could pose a huge risk for your lender.

 

What kind of errors could be made? Well, say someone forged a document. It happens more than you think. Maybe Aunt Sue really never intended to sell that house when she was in a coma. Or what about tax liens against the property? If they were undiscovered at the time of a previous transfer, someone somewhere is owed some money. Title insurance will protect the lender for unforeseen claims against title up to the amount of the mortgage. It’s obligatory that you buy it if that lender is giving you money. You will be required to pay a single up front premium that will protect the lender for the life of the loan.

 

So you can see, a lender’s mortgage insurance policy does very little to protect a buyer. However, buyers can purchase their own title policy insurance to cover their legal fees and needs if a problem with title insurance occurs. It’s usually offered at a discounted rate to them at closing, allowing them to “piggyback” off of the lender’s policy. At a closing I attended the other day, the closing agent told of an undiscovered $10,000 lien that surfaced after a loan closing. It seems that the sellers had a pool built. Unfortunately, they failed to pay the pool builder. So the builder filed a lien against the old homeowners. These homeowners went to sell the home to the new buyers, a title search was done, and there were no issues. But, after closing, the pool builder figured out he had filed his lien in the wrong county. Oops. So he promptly re-filed it correctly. And lo and behold, suddenly there was a doozy of a lien existing against this property. The seller was long gone. Thankfully, the title insurance paid the lien so the lender was happy. And the buyers just had happened to purchase title insurance as well –so, they were happy because the whole fiasco cost them nada. In fact, it might have been the wisest $150 they ever spent. End of story.  

 

#

 

Let My Experience Work For You!

Email your home loan financing questions to Kristin Abouelata, Home Loan Specialist with Mortgage Investors Group, at question@kristinmortgage.com or call

direct: (865) 567-0113

Toll Free: 1-800-489-8910. 

For more information visit her website at www.kristinmortgage.com Home Loans Plain Talk.

Title Insurance, Mortgage Charges, MERS, 1108, home loan financing, credit reports, Home Loan Plain Talk, Mortgage Specialist, Kristin Abouelata

 

Print This Story Print This Story Email This Story Email This Story To A Friend

Subscribe to The Newport Plain Talk by clicking SUBSCRIBE. Sign up for Breaking News emails from The Newport Plain Talk by clicking EMAIL ALERTS and inputting your email address next to "Add Me" near the top right corner.

GET BREAKING NEWS

Enter your email address below to sign up.
Email:


PHOTO GALLERY

CATEGORIES
Local News Sports Community

RECENT GALLERIES

View All Galleries



Comments or questions about our site

Copyright © 2008, The Newport Plain Talk, All Rights Reserved, Privacy Policy
http://newportplaintalk.com