I paid the fee to expedite things and when TCS called me yesterday to tell me I had passed ROFR, they said the closing docs would arrive in about 2 weeks, the same amount of time that you had to wait for your docs.Y-ASK said:As far as length of time for closing, I'm not in that much of a hurry because I'm already a DVC owner three times over. But I find it interesting that since I did not pay for what I consider a non-necessary secondary fee for expidited service that they decided to wait the entire full two weeks after ROFR notification before they sent me my closing documents. I'm already paying my necessary fees for the closing process (and it's not cheap) and I don't think I should be treated as low man on the todum pole as far as processing paperwork is concerned. In my opinion, every customer should be treated equally because that is what the fee should be for. No extra fee should've be charged to expidite the paperwork in the 1st place.
LisaS said:I paid the fee to expedite things and when TCS called me yesterday to tell me I had passed ROFR, they said the closing docs would arrive in about 2 weeks, the same amount of time that you had to wait for your docs.
Will do!Y-ASK said:That is very interesting and you could very well be right about the use of Fed-Ex instead of regular mail. That would explain the extra cost but please respond back and let us know when you actually receive your closing documents to sign. I received mine via E-Mail at exactly two weeks to the day of being told that we passed ROFR.
Thanks,
Y-ASK
"Cashier's check or Money Order (we DO NOT accept credit card and or personal checks) made payable to Timeshare Closing Services Inc. are the only forms of payment accepted by our company." If they will indeed accept a Credit Card Check then they should change the wording in their documents and stop being so negative.
I received my closing docs via email about 20 minutes ago. So, here is the timeline:Y-ASK said:That is very interesting and you could very well be right about the use of Fed-Ex instead of regular mail. That would explain the extra cost but please respond back and let us know when you actually receive your closing documents to sign. I received mine via E-Mail at exactly two weeks to the day of being told that we passed ROFR.
Thanks,
Y-ASK
vascubaguy said:After you pass ROFR, the title company has to request the estoppel letter from DVC. They also have to conduct the title search. I've been told that normally takes about 10 days, but depends on the response time of other entities. The time could also be influenced by your scheduled closing date. If someone had sent in their contract for ROFR waiver before you but DVC took longer to get the waiver back, they might be moved ahead of you because they would have an earlier closing date in their contract. (That's what is happening to me.)
Yes I did. The question we had was whether that fee just covers the cost to "overnight" paperwork to the county and to Disney (thus speeding up what happens after I sign and return the closing docs), or does it also speed up the process of preparing the closing docs.Y-ASK said:That's interesting and you paid the extra fee, right?
Yes, you are correct on the 11 days and 8 days. Today is Friday and assuming that TCS, Inc. is closed on Sat and Sun, if they hadn't finished the paperwork today (Friday) but instead needed one more day, then that day would have been Monday, and Monday will be 14 days since I passed ROFR. So since Monday is the 2-week deadline, then they beat the deadline by 1 (business) day.You lost me on your bottom line of days. I would say that you got your paperwork for closing 11 days after you were notified by TSS and 8 days after you were notified by TCS. Not sure how you got 13 days but no matter.
OK, I didn't pick that up when I read your original post. I thought when you said it was 2 weeks, you meant it was 2 weeks from when you passed ROFR.Here is how my timeline worked out and I did not pay the fee:
Wednesday 07/13/05 - Notified by TSS that I passed ROFR
Thursday 07/15/05 - Notified by TCS that I passed and the paperwork would be there in two weeks. (it was either that Thursday or Friday)
Friday 07/29/05 - Technically the E-Mail was sent at 07/28/05 at 04:28 PM but I did not get it until the following morning.
So my numbers would be 16 days from TSS notification and 14 days from TCS notification.
Remember, though, you have to look at business days, not just elapsed time so I got my docs 4 business days earlier than you did. As vascubaguy just explained TCS needs the results of the title search and the estoppel letter from Disney before they can proceed and they have no control over how long that takes. It would depend on how many estoppel requests are already in the queue at Disney at the time yours is submitted and whether or not they were short staffed that week because somebody was out on vacation, or out sick, etc., etc.So in comparision you got yours about 5-6 days or so before I got mine. Any body want to talk about the process between ROFR and closing paperwork being sent? Is it all in house paper pushing and if so why the difference in time frame or is there something that needs to be sent to the seller and then sent back. The latter would explain the extra time but if it's all in house processing then what could possible be the difference in 5-6 days of processing? Don't want to jump to any conclusions but on the surface there looks to be something there.
Y-ASK
T.E. Yeary said:They will accept a personal or credit card check. They just have to deposit it and wait for the funds to clear. The problem created: It holds up the closing until it clears. Legally, they cannot transfer title until all funds are "good" and accounted for. ...The waiting problem can be easily solved by sending in the personal or credit card check to the closing company PRIOR, (possibly a week) to the actual closing. They can give you an "estimate" of your final closing amount. If there is a discrepancy when the actual closing takes place, they can credit the amount to you and issue you a check if you sent more than needed. If you sent slightly below, then send the difference to them in the manner they suggest. PROBLEM SOLVED!
I too agree with this plan and while I thought of doing this at the start of the process, I should have followed through and sent the entire amount. Both TSS and TCS are very trustworthy companies and I would have no problem sending the entire cost of the DVC contract including estimated closing cost whether is $5,000.00 or $25,000.00.JimC said:Tom's suggestion is right on. I take it a bit further. When I have bought resale I send a check back with the contract for the whole amount, including any closing costs. I have neither the time nor interest in getting checks certified or writing two checks. I say give the closing company the money and their paperwork then let them do what they do.