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What
is title insurance? Newspapers refer to it in the weekly
real estate sections and you hear about it in conversations
with real estate brokers. If you've purchased a home you
may be familiar with the benefits of title insurance. However,
if this is your first home, you may wonder, "Why do
I need yet another insurance policy?" While a number
of issues can be raised by that question, we will start
with a general answer.
The purchase of a home is one of the most expensive and
important purchases you will ever make. You and your mortgage
lender will want to make sure the property is indeed yours
and that no one else has any lien, claim or encumbrance
on your property.
The Indiana Land Title Association, in the following pages,
answers some questions frequently asked about an often misunderstood
line of insurance -- title insurance.
What is the difference between title insurance and casualty
insurance?
Title insurers work to identify and eliminate risk before
issuing a title insurance policy. Casualty insurers assume
risks.
Casualty insurance companies realize that a certain number
of losses will occur each year in a given category (auto,
fire, etc.). The insurers collect premiums monthly or annually
from the policy holders to establish reserve funds in order
to pay for expected losses.
Title companies work in a very different manner. Title insurance
will indemnify you against loss under the terms of your
policy, but title companies work in advance of issuing your
policy to identify and eliminate potential risks and therefore
prevent losses caused by title defects that may have been
created in the past.
Title insurance also differs from casualty insurance in
that the greatest part of the title insurance premium dollar
goes towards risk elimination. Title companies maintain
"title plants" which contain information regarding
property transfers and liens reaching back many years. Maintaining
these title plants, along with the searching and examining
of title, is where most of your premium dollar goes.
Who needs title insurance?
Buyers and lenders in real estate transactions need title
insurance. Both want to know that the property they are
involved with is insured against certain title defects.
Title companies provide this needed insurance coverage subject
to the terms of the policy. The seller, buyer and lender
all benefit from the insurance provided by title companies.
What does title insurance insure?
Title insurance offers protection against claims resulting
from various defects (as set out in the policy) which may
exist in the title to a specific parcel of real property,
effective on the issue date of the policy. For example,
a person might claim to have a deed or lease giving them
ownership or the right to possess your property. Another
person could claim to hold an easement giving them a right
of access across your land. Yet another person may claim
that they have a lien on your property securing the repayment
of a debt. That property may be an empty lot or it may hold
a 50-story office tower. Title companies work with all types
of real property.
What types of policies are available?
Title companies routinely issue two types of policies: An
"owner's" policy which insures you, the homebuyer
for as long as you and your heirs own the home; and a "lender's"
policy which insures the priority of the lender's security
interest over the claims that others may have in the property.
What protection am I obtaining with my title policy?
A title insurance policy contains provisions for the payment
of the legal fees in defense of a claim against your property
which is covered under your policy. It also contains provisions
for indemnification against losses which result from a covered
claim. A premium is paid at the close of a transaction.
There are no continuing premiums due, as there are with
other types of insurance.
What are my chances of ever using my title policy?
In essence, by acquiring your policy, you derive the important
knowledge that recorded matters have been searched and examined
so that title insurance covering your property can be issued.
Because we are risk eliminators, the probability of exercising
your right to make a claim is very low. However, claims
against your property may not be valid, making the continuous
protection of the policy all the more important. When a
title company provides a legal defense against claims covered
by your title insurance policy, the savings to you for that
legal defense alone will greatly exceed the one-time premium.
What if I am buying property from someone I know?
You may not know the owner as well as you think you do.
People undergo changes in their personal lives that may
affect title to their property. People get divorced, change
their wills, engage in transactions that limit the use of
the property and have liens and judgments placed against
them personally for various reasons.
There may also be matters affecting the property that are
not obvious or known, even by the existing owner, which
a title search and examination seeks to uncover as part
of the process leading up to the issuance of the title insurance
policy.
Just as you wouldn't make an investment based on a phone
call, you shouldn't buy real property without assurances
as to your title. Title insurance provides these assurances.
The process of risk identification and elimination performed
by the title companies, prior to the issuance of a title
policy, benefits all parties in the property transaction.
It minimizes the chances that adverse claims might be raised,
and by doing so reduces the number of claims that need to
be defended or satisfied. This process keeps costs and expenses
down for the title company and maintains the traditional
low cost of title insurance.
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