What the Attorney Does
Not all real estate
attorneys work exactly the same way. Unfortunately, there can be great
variations in what an attorney may or may not do for you in
preparation for closing. Below are just a few items your
attorney should take care of when you hire them to represent you in
your real estate purchase:
-
Reviews all the papers your broker wants you to sign.
-
Collects all documents required for closing in a safe
place where they wont be placed or thrown out with the trash, in which case the
closing will have to be postponed while you run around collecting duplicates and the
lawyer charges more.
-
Leaves a paper trail showing that you knew what you
thought you were doing was what you intended to do, and that you think you intended to
have all the right documentation to prove it. Probably.
-
Takes care of obtaining title insurance, which you
should be grateful for because who knows what it is or where you go to get it.
-
Prepares a closing statement, the record of who paid
what to whom in exchange for what. Dont pay your attorney until you receive
your closing statement. Most attorneys will collect their fee at
closing.
This Homebuyers Tip was excerpted
from:
The House Trap, by Alfred Gingold, Workman Publishing, 1988.
ISBN# 0894806157
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