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Put A Real Estate Attorney On Your Side
 
Whether you’re buying or selling a home, a real estate attorney can make sure your interests are protected.  For those considering a transaction without a real estate broker or agent, it is particularly important to engage an attorney.
 
 
If you are selling your home, you want the highest possible price and the fewest possible complications. You also want to avoid potential liabilities after the sale. An attorney can help you meet your goals.
 
 
A real estate attorney is the only member of your home-buying team qualified to give you legal advice. If you hire a real estate lawyer before you sign a purchase contract, you'll be making sure that your home-buying experience goes as smoothly as possible and that potential problems are resolved before closing. Why risk using a title agency and hoping no legal problems arise?
 
 
Title insurance secures your legal claim to the property you purchase and protects you against title "defects" -- legal rights to a property claimed by someone else. Defects can surface even after you've closed on the property. Furthermore, numerous circumstances can arise that keep you from having a “marketable” title and, thus, can hamper your ability to sell the property in the future, With title insurance, the title insurer not only pays the costs if you're ever forced to defend your ownership in court, but also covers loss if the title defects can't be settled.
 
Buying a lender's title insurance policy is required for obtaining a mortgage. This protects the lender against any title problems. To protect your interests, you'll also need owner's title insurance.
 
 
Rare is the real estate transaction that is completed without some give and take between the buyer and seller. You probably won’t want to accept the seller’s initial asking price. And the seller might not accept your counter offer. Negotiations are an integral part at arriving at the best deal.
 
 
In real estate transactions, the closing is the event at which you and the seller sign all of the documents to complete the transaction. The usually occurs in an office. While you and the seller will do all of the signing, others will be in the room to assist, including a closing agent. The closing agent might be your real estate attorney or the seller’s real estate attorney. Others present might include your real estate attorney, the seller’s real estate attorney, a mortgage loan officer, your real estate agent and the seller’s real estate agent.
 
 
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 Real Estate News

 

Mortgage probe unveiled as foreclosure talks loom
Fri, 27 Jan 2012 15:34:11 EST
President Obama's latest probe into the mortgage meltdown will have more power than past efforts, and federal officials say it won't derail a possible $20 billion settlement for underwater and foreclosed homeowners.

Obama expands foreclosure prevention program
Fri, 27 Jan 2012 17:20:05 EST
The Obama administration is taking another swing at improving its main foreclosure prevention program.

New-home sales hit a record low
Thu, 26 Jan 2012 13:27:31 EST
Just 302,000 new homes were sold in 2011, 6.2% below 2010 and the lowest number of annual sales since the government started tracking home sales in 1963.

Romney's real estate deals
Wed, 25 Jan 2012 19:36:45 EST
Out of all of the presidential candidates, former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney owns the most real estate -- even after unloading a couple of sizable properties.

Foreclosures made up 20% of home sales in 3Q
Thu, 26 Jan 2012 05:40:17 EST
Sales of homes in foreclosure comprised 20% of all U.S. residential sales during the third quarter, according to RealtyTrac.