
8 March 2015 | 4 replies
My question is, since I won't be getting title insurance from the title company I would close with since the property is clouded can I just have the seller quit-claim it to me for price A and then I quit-claim it to my buyer for price B?

11 March 2015 | 31 replies
With a quiet title judgment order, any and all liability from prior owners carry forward to you, and of course, the title company who may be insuring the closing.In most jurisdictions, liens, judgments, taxes, encroachments, assessments may cloud the title for up to 10 years.

11 March 2015 | 0 replies
One of the best ways is to make sure that your option is "assignable", which means you can sell it.This gives you flexibility in case you have to move or you can't get financing.Another way to protect yourself is to "record the option" at the county recorder's office, which basically "clouds" the title, preventing the seller from selling the property.Legally, properties can be sold "subject to options," but just recording your option to purchase will help protect your contract with the seller.Another way to protect yourself as a buyer on a lease to own is to use a third-party collection company, like www.notecollection.comThe note collection company will take your money from your bank account, and pay the mortgage company their PITI payment that the seller is supposed pay every month.

27 January 2016 | 12 replies
If you think the seller and end buyer is going to go behind your back, then go to county records and file affidavit of memorandum of purchase and sale agreement and it would cloud the title (when seller and end buyer try to make a deal and close behind your back).

18 March 2015 | 15 replies
State laws vary, but generally just a dispute over the EM would not be any cloud or impediment to the seller selling the property.

21 March 2015 | 16 replies
It protects you the REI and the Home Seller in case the Buyer gets an attorney (ambulance chaser) and sues you for not underwriting the Buyer as per the ATR (Ability to Repay Rules of Dodd Frank), enforced by the CFPB (see http://search.yahoo.com/search?

5 June 2013 | 2 replies
I believe we'd have an opportunity to collaborate.See you in the clouds.

7 June 2013 | 12 replies
If it really is that big of a problem you can file you agreement at the court which will cloud title for anyone else trying to buy.

10 July 2013 | 21 replies
,Are you allowing greed to cloud your judgment?
2 August 2013 | 5 replies
In addition, filing it seperately, say when you need it in the future, could also create release issues clouding title.