Title Guarantee

I have personally acted for banks and other lending institutions for approximately twelve years. In that time, I have acted for probably ten to twelve such institutions and have never acted for a lender who is willing to sell a property as mortgagee in possession with Full or Limited title guarantee.

I know some mortgagees are willing to sell with Limited title guarantee but had I ever been instructed by a lender who wanted to do so, I would advise firmly against it.

The main reason for this is that one of the implied covenants by a seller when transferring a property with Limited title guarantee is that the seller covenants that with the buyer as follows : "the transferor has not charged or incumbered the property by a charge or incumbrance which still exists, that he has not granted any third party rights which still subsist and that he is not aware that anyone else has done so since the last disposition for value".

The words I have highlighted provide the fundamental difficulty. Most of the mortgagees we act for have hundreds if not thousands of employees. It is not possible or practical for a mortgagee to give this categorical assurance. For example, had the borrower written to the lender to inform them that he had granted a right of way to his neighbour to cross his land for some reason, this would constitute notice.

It is not unheard of for mortgagees to even agree to such a right and then lose the correspondence confirming this agreement. If for some reason the neighbour had yet to register the right, the mortgagee would breach the above covenant by not disclosing this fact. It is also not unheard of that one department within a bank may have notice of something and not disclose it to another department.

This is just a basic example and there are also other implied covenants when transferring with...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT