What
is Title Insurance?
Title
insurance is an exclusively American invention. Its purpose
was well stated in the first advertisement for title insurance
back in the late 1800s:
"This company
insures the purchaser’s of real estate and mortgages against
loss from defective titles, liens, and encumbrances. Through
these facilities [the] transfer of real estate and real estate
securities can be made more speedily and with greater security
than heretobefore." [circa 1876]
Protecting purchasers
against loss is accomplished by the
issuance of a title insurance policy, which states that if the
status of the title to a parcel of real property is other than
as represented, and if the insured suffers a loss as a result
of title defect, the insurer will reimburse the insured for
that loss and any related legal expenses, up to the face amount
of the policy.
Title insurance differs
significantly from other forms of insurance. While the functions
of most other forms of insurance is risk assumption through
the pooling of risks for losses arising out of unforeseen future
events (such as death or accidents), the primary purpose of
title insurance is to eliminate risks and prevent losses caused
by defects in title arising out of events that have happened
in the past. To achieve this goal, title insurers perform an
extensive search of the public records to determine whether
there are any adverse claims to the subject real estate. Those
claims are either eliminated prior to the issuance of a title
policy or their existence is excepted from coverage.
What are
the Benefits of Title Insurance?
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