Posted on 12/02/2021 10:11:38 AM PST by SeekAndFind
Two words: Title Insurance - one time purchase.
Two words: Title Insurance - one time purchase.
I do not know the answer, but in general when you purchase a home and the title is finalized by a title company do you not have “insurance”?
I hear these ads often but I had never heard of such a theft.
Curious if anyone has a more definitive answer?
“For the last 26 years, I’ve been a real estate agent. “
On every house transaction I had to ‘school’ the agent.
Scammers cannot take your home or your equity.
The ones who will loose out is the bank or creditor making the equity loan to the scammer as it will fall back to them.
I noticed Newt has changed his language in the Title theft commercial
My real estate lawyer friend laughs at these commercials.
In both Wisconsin and Ohio the title company provided a document called Title Insurance. In Ohio it was required. In Wisconsin it was advised but not mandatory. The purpose is that you are not out if something goes wrong with the title of the house you procured.
Now reading more on this is sounds like blatant forgery and fraud and should be a simple matter of proving that it isn’t your signature.
I’ve heard lots of these ads lately and wondered about them.
It’s a BS story, scammers selling insurance you don’t need.
Title Insurance from a Title Company when buying, selling or loaning is the answer. Lenders require it.
That has always been the rub. Let’s say someone forges the title and claims ownership..... seems like an easy investigation to show the claim is fraudulent and it would be an easy arrest. You would have realtors, a title company, and claim of ownership (I purchased the home and moved in).
I don’t see how paying a company 10 dollars a month is worth it to monitor my title or that it is necessary?
“Now reading more on this is sounds like blatant forgery and fraud and should be a simple matter of proving that it isn’t your signature.”
I own a office building that is paid in full. Last year I took out a $120k business equity loan to finance major rehab/new roof, doors/windows etc.
The bank knows me. The guy giving me the loan has known me for 25 years but I had to supply two forms of ID, notarized forms in their presence, Last 5 years of tax forms, they even did a credit check, wanted to know all my pension plan account numbers etc etc.
....and these folks have known me for 25 years!!!
So many conservate broadcaster are pushing this scam.
What you also have is a County Public Trustee who has accepted and recorded your title and won’t accept and record a new one without proper documentation removing your name from the current title.
RE: So many conservate broadcaster are pushing this scam.
Mark Levin promotes this “Home Title Lock” everyday in his broadcast. What can I say?
“So many conservate broadcaster are pushing this scam.”
That’s because a couple of “conservatives” are pushing the needless insurance and paying for the commercials. Newt is one and that idiot who lost his Fox show whose name escapes me is the other.
My two cents' worth on why I wouldn't bother. Assuming you don't buy the house outright with cash you've bought it with a mortgage. This means the bank is part owner for many years. Even if your state doesn't require title insurance your bank does. And it's for reasons like this. If someone tries to claim ownership of your property, your bank's lawyers will come to bat for you (for the bank) because the bank has a vested interest in keeping someone else from claiming your property. The bank wants their money back for the purchase of the home, and they know that you're the one that'll pay it. But only if you continue to live there.
In the many years it takes to pay off your mortgage (be it a 15 year mortgage or 30 year mortgage) if no one tries to claim your property until after the mortgage is paid off then that person would have a steep uphill battle explaining why they didn't claim it for 30 years. That'd be hard to win in court. And if someone tried to sue you for your property, claiming they're the true owner, you can counter-sue and do it without an attorney. In other words, you can legally make it costly to them without it costing you (sans a $50 or so motion filing fee). The more you interact with their attorney while you're pro se (legally representing yourself), the more it costs your adversary and not you. Which means the quicker they'll drop their case. (At least that's been my experience in a similar manner, completely unrelated to someone claiming they owned my property.)
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Bill o’really here! Home Title Lock. I always hated bill o’reilly. Also Hannity. But alsk some of my other really favorite talk show hosts read the script as an advertisement. I think the advertisers like the authoritative voice to deliver their message. I don’t believe it for a minute. I really don’t respect the people who sell this and it tarnishes the radio personalities that perpetuate it. It makes daytime conservative talk radio look bad.
i have the title AND the title-chain (all the way back to the confiscation of the property from the Seneca) in my bankbox
and if the clerk saw my property on her desk wiout hearing from me or my being there, she’d call the Sheriff’s office next door...
I do not know the answer, but in general when you purchase a home and the title is finalized by a title company do you not have “insurance”?
Maybe colloquially called a title company, but actually is a title insurance company.
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