JimMIA
There's more to life than mice...
- Joined
- Feb 16, 2005
- Messages
- 21,168
I'll give you just one quick example of the kind of problems we are talking about here. Upon closing, the title agency makes disbursements from escrow - sellers proceeds, realtor's commissions, various taxes, title insurance premiums, loan payoffs, etc.mikesmom said:Mistakes in this type of transaction are serious. They can have immense impact on the finances and ownership clarity of two different parties.
I agree that someone in the state should be given a heads up about the situation. Lives can be seriously affected if you realize a mistake years later and ownership, inheritance or other factors about a piece of property are suddenly in question.
But what if they dont'? Would you really notice? Certainly you would notice if you didn't receive the proceeds of your sale and the realtors would notice the lack of a commission, but how many buyers would notice if the deed was not really recorded, or the title insurance policy never actually got issued? How many sellers really check to be sure their mortgage was actually paid off?
In a recent case in Florida (NOT involving any of the title agents who work on timeshare resales) a title agent simply never purchased title insurance on hundreds of mortgages. They issued the committments, but pocketed the premiums instead of actually issuing the policies. They were so sloppy, they even issued the same insurance committments for different pieces of property. Those mortgages were packaged by an Orlando bank and sold to private investors.
When the fraud was discovered, there were two groups of people at risk - homeowners without title insurance, and investors holding uninsured mortgages. Do you think the bank notified anyone? NO, of course not. To do so would reveal their incompetence. They kept their mouths shut and hoped for the best. The title insurance companies eventually contacted the homeowners and notified them of their exposure and that they needed to get title insurance on their own, but there are still a lot of investors unprotected. The bank (a private mortgage bank, not a retail bank you would deal with) never did do the right thing.
I'm not sure what happened to the bank. The state should have closed them, but I don't know if they did or not. They did close the title agency, which then moved to Ohio...where I'm sure they are doing the same thing.