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An examination of a real estate title
can be compared to a structural inspection of your prospective home. It is
an examination to determine essentially if there is anything wrong with the
ownership of the property or if there are any limitations of which you should
be aware.
In Maine, the title examiner is required
to search the public records (the history of the property) for a minimum of
forty years or until the examiner can “rest” on a warranty deed, whichever
is later. This “resting deed” becomes the starting point for the title search.
It may be one hundred or more years in the past! From that point to the present,
the examiner is required to review every single transaction (document) which
might effect your property. There could be probate estates involved, subdivisions
of the property over time, the grant of easements or other rights of usage,
tax liens, mechanics liens, divisions resulting from divorces, foreclosure
actions, condemnation proceedings, and a multitude of other transactions which
the examiner must review and approve.
The end result is an opinion that the
title is sound. In other words, the seller really does own the property. However,
the property might be subject to certain encumbrances such as an existing
mortgage which must be “discharged” (paid-off) for the seller to convey clear
title to the buyer.
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Returning to our structural inspection
analogy, a title opinion is just that, an opinion. It is the result of an
inspection of the title. The examiner cannot guarantee there are no title
problems any more than the home inspector can say for certain that there is
not a structural defect in the building. Each professional renders an opinion
based upon observable facts and field experience. But that does not mean that
there cannot be undetectable flaws. Because there is an element of uncertainty,
there is risk. Title insurance addresses that risk and is designed to compensate
home buyers for actual losses resulting from title defects.
Lenders are aware of the complexity of
land titles and the risk involved. They require the purchase of lender’s title
insurance.
The buyer is not required to purchase
protection. However, buyer's insurance is available at costs representing
a small fraction of the value of the property. This one-time charge provides
protection for as long as the buyer owns the property.
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