If you have your policy of title insurance in your "house documents", that's the best way.
The second best way is to ask your escrow company or real estate company. They are required to keep records for three years here in California.
The third way is to look at your grant deed. In many (but not all) places the title company does the actual recording and the Grant Deed will have something like "Recorded at the Request of XXXX Title company" and usually an order number as well! If you can't find your Grant Deed, it's a matter of public record. You should be able to get it from the county recorder.
Not that either the second or third are necessarily going to help if you have a claim. You want to have your actual policy of title insurance somewhere safe.
2006-08-01 03:19:06
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answer #1
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answered by Searchlight Crusade 5
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Did you receive a Title Insurance Policy? If so, there will be a signature line & name block for the issuing agent. Call him/her & ask. In most places the actual "searches" are done by computers that print out list of documents affecting title. The Title examiner (who may be an employee or contractor with the issuing agent) then orders copies of of any documents s/he needs and based on that either preapres a title report for the agent or prepares the title requirements and title insurance policy directly.
If you have a specific title question or want a copy of a specific document, call the agent & ask.
2006-08-01 03:02:14
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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You can look on your HUD, page 2, lines 1100 to 1113. The name of the title company should be in that section.
You could also call the lawyer who represented you at closing and ask. Most law offices have a favorite title company that they use for most of their closings.
And if you can find your title policy, it should be on there.
2006-08-01 03:55:09
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answer #3
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answered by BoomChikkaBoom 6
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in many cases, application costs are charged to a guy or woman to not a house. The application business enterprise can circulate after the guy whose account isn't paid, yet can not placed a lien on a house owned by using a clean proprietor. If the regulation is distinctive in California, then you extremely've a case against the call business enterprise which didn't hit upon the lien. You paid for the coverage. Its purpose is to grant the risk-free practices.
2016-12-11 04:17:25
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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In many cases the Tile Company is named in the Good Faith Estimate as well. The GFE is part of any disclosure package.
2006-08-01 04:40:18
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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