Sunday, December 23, 2012

Seventh Circuit – “created or suffered” exclusion of a title insurance policy with a mechanic’s lien endorsement - Lexology

As a matter of first impression, the Seventh Circuit recently issued an opinion interpreting a “created or suffered” exclusion in a title insurance policy with a mechanic’s lien endorsement. See 695 F.3d 725 (7th Cir. 2012). In interpreting the exclusion, the court held that a title insurance company breached its duty to defend a construction lender under a mechanic’s lien endorsement to a title insurance policy.

In this case, the lender agreed to lend $95.5 million to finance the construction of an ethanol production plant. The lender was to disburse the loan in installments. To protect its mortgage, the lender purchased title insurance. The title insurance company was required to perform a title search after the lender made each loan disbursement. The lender paid an extra premium for a mechanic’s lien endorsement which insured against “enforcement or attempted enforcement” of a mechanic’s lien claim having priority over or sharing on a parity with the mortgage. The mechanic’s lien endorsement also required the title insurance company to defend the lender “in litigation in which any third party asserts a claim…alleging a defect, lien or encumbrance or other matter insured against by this policy.”

After $87 million of the loan had been disbursed, a dispute arose between the owner and the general contractor, which resulted in the general contractor filing a $6 million mechanic’s lien against the property. Suspecting a lien had been filed, the lender requested that the title insurance company perform a title search. The title insurance company updated the title search and disclosed the existence of the general contractor’s lien and, at that point, made an express exception from coverage.

After the lender filed suit to recover the $95.5 million due under the loan and to foreclose on its mortgage, the general contractor asserted a counterclaim against the lender, claiming that it was entitled to enforce its lien against the entire property and claiming priority over the lender’s lien. Although the title insurance company initially acknowledged the contractor was seeking a judgment determining that its lien was prior to and superior to the lender’s mortgage, it denied the lender’s request for defense and indemnification. After settling with the contractor, the lender then sued the title insurance company for breaching its duty to defend and indemnify under the title insurance policy and the mechanic’s lien endorsement.

In conducting its analysis, the Seventh Circuit noted that many title insurance policies insure only against mechanic’s liens arising before the endorsement date and for which labor or materials have already been furnished. However, the endorsement at issue in this case covered any claim “arising from construction contracted for and/or commenced on the land prior to, at, or subsequent to the effective date.” The court held that under the terms of the policy and endorsement, the title insurance company was required to defend against any enforcement or attempted enforcement of a claim asserting priority over or parity with the mortgage, regardless of the merits of the attempted enforcement. Although the contractor had little chance of success of prevailing on its counterclaim under Indiana law, the insurer still had a duty to defend the lender since the counterclaim was an attempt to enforce a claim of priority over a mortgage.

Of notable interest, the title insurance company also argued that coverage was excluded under the policy since it excluded from coverage claims “created, suffered, assumed or agreed to or by the Insured claimant.” As explained by the court, the “created or suffered” exclusion is standard in title insurance contracts and “apparently, one of the most litigated clauses in the field.” The title insurance company argued that the lender “created, suffered, assumed, or agreed to the lien” when the lender decided not to disburse the remaining $8.5 million in funds under the loan. Although the court recognized that First American Title Ins. Co. v. Action Acquisitions, LLC, 187 F.3d 1107 (Ariz. 2008) may support this argument, the “overwhelming weight of authority is to the contrary.” Rather, the “‘created or suffered’ language is intended to protect the insurer from liability for matters caused by the insured’s own intentional misconduct, breach of duty, or otherwise inequitable dealings.” Noting that neither Indiana nor the Seventh Circuit had ever defined the “created or suffered exclusion”, the court predicted that Indiana would adopt the majority view that the exception only applies when the insured was guilty of intentional misconduct, breach of duty, or otherwise inequitable dealings and does not apply when the insured is innocent of any conduct causing the loss or was simply negligent in bringing about the loss. Here, there was no allegation or evidence that the lender engaged in deliberate, dishonest, or illegal dealings.

The court also rejected the title insurance company’s claim that the lender breached a duty to the title insurance company to distribute the entirety of the loan proceeds. Id. at 733- 734. In distinguishing Brown v. St. Paul Title Ins. Corp., 634 F.2d 1103 (8th Cir. 1980) and Bankers Trust Co. v. Transamerica Title Ins. Co., 594 F.2d 231 (10th Cir. 1979), both of which involved title insurance policies and mechanic’s lien endorsements similar to the one at issue, the court noted a “critical” factual difference in those cases. There, the insured lenders had each “agreed to make adequate funds available to pay the developers and their contractors.” The court found it significant that in those cases, the title insurers assumed the responsibility for securing the lien waivers and actually disbursing the loan funds to the various contractors. These agreements with the title insurance companies clearly contemplated that the lenders would make adequate funds available to the title insurance company to satisfy claims. However, in this title insurance policy, there was nothing that required the lender to disburse the entirety of the funds. Because there was not a disbursement agreement with the title insurance company, the lender did not have a duty to disburse all of the funds. Therefore, the claim did not fall within the “created or suffered” exclusion as defined and interpreted by the court.

Construction Law Update

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Friday, December 21, 2012

PRE/POST CLOSERS - TITLE INDUSTRY

Manpower 1,065 reviews - Boca Raton, FL
Manpower is seeking Pre/Post Closers within the Title Industry for positions located in Southern Palm Beach County to work the Fannie files. Duties include, updating title and lien searches, correspondence with buyers, Realtors and lenders, ordering surveys, insurance, commission info, etc..
Assisting the Closer in the processing of the file, with tasks such as initial outreach to buyer, Realtor and lender, order updated title commitment and lien searches, order commission info, insurance info, survey and coordinate with lender for closing document production.

Background Requirements:
ONLY QUALIFIED CANDIDATES NEED APPLY
7 year criminal background search
Requires Associates Degree or Equivalent
At least THREE YEARS related experience within title Industry is REQUIRED

Skills:
Strong customer relations and communications (verbal and written) skills
Project a positive image while balancing the needs of the client, agent and the business
Detail Oriented and must be able to Multi-task
Double Time is preferred

Manpower is an Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE/AA)
Manpower - 17 hours ago - save job -  block

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Thursday, December 6, 2012

Take Action to Save Mortgage Interest Deduction

Title Action Network Urges Action to Save Mortgage Interest Deduction

December 6, 2012

ALTA issued a grassroots action alert to members of the Title Action Network regarding the need to preserve the mortgage interest deduction (MID).

The alert encouraged members of the network to share concerns about any fiscal cliff solution that involves modification or elimination of the mortgage interest deduction. President Obama in December indicated the MID could be at risk.

“The housing industry is a major component in our fragile economic recovery and any modification of the mortgage interest deduction will have negative impacts,” the grassroots letter said. “As our economy continues to recover, it is important to retain the jobs our industry is creating. Changes to the mortgage interest deduction would halt job growth and not allow us to preserve jobs during this nascent recovery. Additionally, the mortgage interest deduction helps homebuyers get into their first home. We must be careful before making changes that will deter homeownership.”

So far, more than 100 members of the Network have informed more than 200 members of Congress about the importance of the MID.

To join the Network and take action, go to www.titleactionnetwork.com.


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There's a home price recovery... but it's really, really slow - Dec. 5, 2012

If Congress can't agree on a fiscal cliff deal, a recession is likely, and that would hit the housing recovery hard.

NEW YORK (CNNMoney)

Just about everybody agrees that the housing market is finally recovering -- but don't expect big price gains.

Nearly two-thirds of the nation's housing markets will see price declines for the year through next June, according to analytics firm Fiserv (FISV). Overall, the gains will be just 0.3%.

One big factor that could weigh on prices: The fiscal cliff.

If Congress can't agree on a deal to halt a series of tax increases and spending cuts, a recession is likely, and that would hit the housing recovery hard.

In addition, if the Bush-era tax cut on capital gains is allowed to expire -- allowing the rate to increase to 20% from 15% on Jan. 1 -- it would take a significant bite out of the profits high-end sellers would realize and give them less to spend on buying a new home, said Celia Chen, an economist and housing market analyst for Moody's Analytics.

"Even people who do have the resources to buy homes will be more nervous," she said.

Related: Home prices: Your local forecast

But even if we avoid the fiscal cliff, there are other factors weighing on home prices.

In order to raise more tax revenue, Congress is considering putting a cap on the mortgage interest tax deduction, a key tax break aimed at encouraging homeownership -- mainly among the upper-middle class.

Most of the benefit of this deduction goes to wealthier households. Mortgage borrowers with incomes of $250,000 or more realize an average annual tax savings of $5,460, according to the Tax Policy Center. Meanwhile, those making less than $40,000 a year, save just $91.

Capping the deduction would discourage buyers from buying bigger, more expensive homes, said Chen.

But it's not just the high-end of the market that could get squeezed.

With Congress distracted by the fiscal cliff, there is a real chance that the Mortgage Debt Forgiveness Act of 2007 could expire come January 1. If the act were to lapse, struggling homeowners will have to start paying income taxes on the portion of their mortgage that is forgiven in a foreclosure, short sale or principal reduction.

Related: Most affordable cities for homebuying

That means homeowners will be on the hook for thousands of dollars in taxes that they likely can't afford. That will force more people who could have sought a less damaging alternative, like a short sale, to choose foreclosure instead.

Fiserv's estimates assume that about half of the fiscal cliff tax hikes and spending cuts will occur, said Stiff. The forecast does not take into account any change to the mortgage interest deduction. Should that deduction expire, Stiff said home prices might be even weaker over the short-term.

Fiserv expects home prices to start heating up again next fall. Between June 2013 and 2014, it expects prices to climb 3.4% and to continue to grow at an annual rate of about 3.3% over the five years through June 2017. To top of page

Home prices: Biggest winners and losers
These cities will see the biggest swings in home prices through the 12 months ending June 30, 2013, according to Fiserv's estimates.
City Forecast change
Medford, Ore. 8.7%
Yuma, Ariz 6.2%
Syracuse, N.Y. 5.2%
Hagerstown, Md. 5.2%
Pittsfield, Ma 4.9%
Naples, Fla. -7.6%
Fort Lauderdale, Fla. -7%
Orlando, Fla. -6.9%
San Jose, Calif. -5.9%
Phoenix -5.8%
Source: Fiserv

First Published: December 5, 2012: 5:25 AM ET

Interesting comments about the effect of the fiscal cliff

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Monday, December 3, 2012

Fitch: U.S. Title Insurance Industry s Combined Ratio Reaches 90 Percent - Insurance Networking News

Industry continues to benefit as home inventories and distressed sales decline and prices stabilize.

Insurance Networking News, November 27, 2012

Chris McMahon

Amidst some impressive financial numbers, the U.S. title insurance industry remains stable, according to a report titled “2013 Outlook: U.S. Title Insurance Industry,” from Fitch Ratings. The outlook reflects the belief that rating actions will balance approximate current levels over the next 12 to 18 months as financial performance has improved and capital levels remain adequate.

Fitch said the industry is adequately capitalized, although capital strength varies considerably from company to company. Fitch's view is based on a non-risk adjusted approach, such as net written premiums to surplus and a risk adjusted approach via Fitch's Risk Adjusted Capital model.

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On a GAAP basis, operating profit margins rose to 10.3 percent in the first nine months of 2012, vs. 6.1 percent last year. Earnings improved for all underwriters and First American Financial and Fidelity National Title posted the highest margins. For the first nine months of the year, title revenues increased by more than 15 percent, as refinancing activity exceeded expectations and housing markets stabilized. The underwriting combined ratio reached 90.7 percent, a level unmatched since 2006, as growth reduced expense ratios and claims experience improved.

The title insurance industry continues to benefit from a recuperating housing market, which shows less inventory and higher home prices. According to the National Association of Realtors, U.S. housing prices rose this year, and many markets demonstrated year-over-year price increases for the first time since the housing crisis began in 2007. Economists attribute the price increase to declining inventory and fewer distressed sales.

The Mortgage Bankers Association of America forecasts mortgage originations to decline to $1.3 billion in 2013 and $1 billion in 2014, from $1.7 billion in 2012. The decline is driven by a projected decline in refinance activity over the next two years, which is expected to be somewhat offset by greater purchase activity.

For more information on related topics, visit the following channels:

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Failing to deliver title insurance opens up a number of risks

October 16, 2012
By: TimLemieux
Category: Real estate
This article by Kathleen Waters (President & CEO at LAWPRO) originally appeared in the Oct 5 issue of The Lawyers Weekly published by LexisNexis Canada Inc.

Hundreds of real estate malpractice claims find their way to LAWPRO every year. Some involve complex and exotic fact situations, but many do not.

At the heart of most claims is the lawyer’s failure to deliver something the client has requested or expected. Where the deliverable is at the heart of the deal - keys or money - the client will promptly draw the lawyer’s attention to a failure to deliver. Deliverables that are less connected to the client’s immediate needs, like a title insurance policy, are easier to overlook.

Failing to secure title insurance when instructed to do so is perhaps the easiest way to increase your risk when acting on a real estate deal. From the lawyer’s (and LAWPRO’s) perspective, it’s also emerging as a dangerous exposure.

Why? When a lawyer is asked to secure title insurance and doesn’t, he or she effectively becomes responsible for everything the policy would have covered, even if the range of insurance protection exceeds the normal standard of practice in the “opinion on title” world.

Consider a lawyer who makes a different kind of error?—?for example, assume we are in the “old days” and the lawyer forgets to search with the local municipality for building department work orders. The purchaser-client discovers post-closing that there is building non-compliance at the property, but no work order has been issued. In the Ontario conveyancing world pre-title insurance, that would likely have been the end of the matter in terms of the lawyer’s exposure: From a causation perspective, the lawyer is off the hook because there is no way the lawyer could have uncovered the issue by making the standard search.

But many title insurance policies cover a purchaser (and lender) where the non-compliance existed at closing and a work order is issued at a later date. In today’s world, where the lawyer is instructed but fails to secure title insurance, the alleged error becomes failure to obtain the title insurance and the non-existence of a work order as of closing becomes irrelevant.

How does title insurance get missed? Often in haste. One of the advantages of using title insurance to protect a deal is that it can permit shorter closing periods by eliminating some search-related delays. Rushing a transaction may mean that the title policy is applied for, but the deal is closed before the policy coverage is actually bound. If signs of a problem emerge after closing, the insurer may decline to proceed with the policy or insist on exclusions. After all, the insurer did not bind itself, in our example, to issue a policy.

This “error” is more likely in situations where there is uncertainty about the legal effect of the insurer’s response to the application. Title insurers vary in their procedures. An insurer may respond to certain applications for insurance by issuing the policy itself, such that it takes immediate effect on closing without the need for any other action on the insured’s part. Some lawyers may, by their own actions, be authorized to bind the insurer, provided they stay within the terms of their firm’s agreement with the insurer. In other cases, an insurer might issue a “binder” that provides temporary coverage pending finalization of the terms, disclosure of information, or satisfaction of conditions. An insurer may, for example, call this binding of coverage “pre-approval.”

After the coverage is bound, it’s common for insurers to require the insured (meaning, his/her lawyer) to take certain actions as a precondition to the negotiated coverage taking effect. For example, to secure TitlePLUS title insurance coverage, the insured is always required to submit the registration number for the transfer (or mortgage), so we know the deal was closed and registration occurred.

The dangerous claims mentioned above typically arise in situations where the client (whether the lender or the purchaser) has instructed the lawyer to obtain title insurance, the lawyer has taken the initial step of contacting the insurer about coverage, but then has failed to realize that the coverage has not been bound before closing. By “bound”, I mean a contractual agreement that allows the insured to insist upon issuance of the policy, subject to payment of the premium and satisfaction of clearly defined pre-conditions to issuance (if any).

What kinds of loss can this problem apply to? Consider, for example, an instance of identity fraud: A lender requests title insurance as a condition of making a mortgage loan, the lawyer undertakes to obtain the insurance, the mortgage funds are advanced, and it later comes to light that the “owner” who obtained the mortgage was actually a fraudster, and the real owner of the property has no knowledge of the mortgage transaction.

Before the advent of title insurance, a lawyer who handled a transaction that turned out to be based on identity fraud would likely not be liable for the loss if he or she had taken reasonable steps to guard against fraud (for example, checking the mortgagor’s identification). The essence of a good fraud has always been how hard it is to detect.

With the advent of title insurance, which provides coverage for fraud, the situation is markedly different: In instructing the lawyer to obtain title insurance, the lender is no longer relying on the lawyer’s reasonable efforts to investigate the identity of the borrowers?—?????????it is purchasing protection against loss regardless of flaws in that process. The risk of identity theft is intended to be moved to the insurance company. The lawyer’s failure to obtain the insurance is causally linked to the lender client’s loss, if the mortgage proves to be unenforceable.

Sobering? We hope so. But the solution is conceptually straightforward, if time-consuming on occasion: Follow through fully on title insurance instructions; be sure you understand the legal effect of the insurer’s response to the policy application, whichever insurance company you chose to deal with; consider before closing whether any conditions on the insurance binder or pre-approval are acceptable to you and your client, seeking instructions if necessary; comply with all conditions of coverage; and give the client prompt notice of issuance of the policy.

via avoidaclaim.com

Good article for real estate attorneys

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ALTA President available for Comment on Fiscal Cliff

For Immediate Release                                            

 

 

American Land Title Association President Available for Comment on

 

Fiscal Cliff Discussions and Mortgage Interest Deduction

 

 

 

 

Washington, D.C., December 3, 2012 — American Land Title Association President Frank Pellegrini will be available from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Eastern on Tuesday, December 4, to discuss the fiscal cliff and how the effects of sweeping changes in the tax code, including potential modification or exclusion of the mortgage interest deduction, would slow a housing recovery and make buying a home more expensive for first-time buyers.

 

 

 

To schedule an interview, please contact Wayne Stanley at 202-261-2932 or wayne@alta.org. Interviews will be scheduled on a first come, first serve basis.

 

 

 

 

###

 

 

 

About ALTA

 

 

 

The American Land Title Association, founded in 1907, is a national trade association representing more than 4,000 title insurance companies, title agents, independent abstracters, title searchers, and attorneys. ALTA members conduct title searches, examinations, closings, and issue title insurance that protects real property owners and mortgage lenders against losses from defects in titles.

 

 

 

 

 

Wayne Stanley

 

Manager of External Communications

 

American Land Title Association

 

202-261-2932 | wstanley@alta.org

 

        

 

 

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ALTA President available for Comment on Fiscal Cliff

For Immediate Release                                            

 

American Land Title Association President Available for Comment on

Fiscal Cliff Discussions and Mortgage Interest Deduction

 

 

Washington, D.C., December 3, 2012 — American Land Title Association President Frank Pellegrini will be available from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Eastern on Tuesday, December 4, to discuss the fiscal cliff and how the effects of sweeping changes in the tax code, including potential modification or exclusion of the mortgage interest deduction, would slow a housing recovery and make buying a home more expensive for first-time buyers.

 

To schedule an interview, please contact Wayne Stanley at 202-261-2932 or wayne@alta.org. Interviews will be scheduled on a first come, first serve basis.

 

 

###

 

About ALTA

 

The American Land Title Association, founded in 1907, is a national trade association representing more than 4,000 title insurance companies, title agents, independent abstracters, title searchers, and attorneys. ALTA members conduct title searches, examinations, closings, and issue title insurance that protects real property owners and mortgage lenders against losses from defects in titles.

 

 

Wayne Stanley

Manager of External Communications

American Land Title Association

202-261-2932 | wstanley@alta.org

        

 

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