| Purchasing a home is the single largest transaction
ever entered into by the average family in an entire lifetime. Because
of its size, the transaction must be handled with skill, expertise
and great attention to detail. Typically, then, you will choose
an attorney to handle this transaction for you. The attorney's work
will begin long before closing and continue until all matters to
be handled by him are completed, including the title search, document
preparation, and attendance at closing and recording of instruments.
The following defines some of the more important terms relative
to the purchase or sale of your home.
Title Search
In order to ensure that the current owner has good
title to the property being sold, an examination of title is made
of the public records of the parish in which the property is situated.
The examination is not limited merely to the time during which the
current owner occupied the property, but will encompass a preceding
period. In addition to determining ownership, the title search will
uncover all liens, encumbrances, covenants, easements, rights-of-way,
and similar matters recorded which affect the property.
Title Insurance
Your real estate purchase contract will generally
require the seller to provide some evidence of title. The most common
form is title insurance which insures against hazards inherent in
real estate titles but which may not be apparent from the title
search. Title insurance protects the purchaser against loss from
any undisclosed claim covered by the policy arising out of the past
to threaten the purchaser's ownership of real estate, in addition
to advising the purchaser as to the status of the title to the land
which the purchaser is buying, which can be discovered from the
public records so that any defects in title may be corrected before
the transaction is closed. Title insurance is an uncommon form of
insurance in that there is only one premium paid (at the time of
closing). Typically the cost of title insurance is paid by the purchaser.
Financing
Almost all real estate transactions require some form
of financing. The typical example is one in which a bank or savings
and loan association advances seventy to eighty percent of the purchase
price and obtains a first mortgage lien on the real estate. Another
typical example is one in which the seller advances a portion of
the purchase price and obtains a first or second mortgage on the
real estate. n either or both events, the purchaser will be required
to execute a mortgage note in favor of the individual or institution
to secure payment of the monies advanced. The mortgage will be recorded
in the parish in which the real estate is situated and will become
a lien on the real estate until such time as the mortgage is paid
in full. In the past, is was common for lending institutions to
loan money for lengthy periods of time at fixed interest rates.
However, adjustable interest rate mortgages have now become common
and generally call for an increase or decrease in the interest rate
charged the purchaser on an annual or bi-annual basis. Whether you
are confronted with a fixed rate mortgage or an adjustable rate
mortgage, the expertise of someone knowledgeable and familiar with
these documents is required to provide you with a full understanding
of the agreement that is being made with the lending institution.
Settlement or Closing
Once financing has been approved, your real estate
agent will coordinate a time and place for closing. At the closing,
a settlement statement will have been prepared indicating the manner
in which funds will be disbursed regarding your real estate transaction.
The seller will deliver to the purchaser a title to the premises,
which is the instrument by which legal ownership of the property
transfers. The purchaser will deliver the purchase price to the
seller and execute the necessary financing documents, if any. After
the closing, the title will be recorded among the public records
of the parish which the property is situated.
Regardless of the amount of the preparation involved,
there are always questions which arise at the time of closing. Due
to the efforts of your real estate agent in conjunction with your
attorney, these questions will be kept to a minimum, and the closing
will be as smooth as possible. It is extremely difficult to modify
any of these documents executed at the closing after the time of
closing; thus it is important to have a clear understanding of all
documentation at the time of closing. You have already selected
a professional real estate agent to assist you in buying or selling
your property. Choosing an experienced real estate attorney to assist
you in closing the transaction is equally important.
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