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#1
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![]() My fiancee and I just bought a house in Northern Virginia and ran into a small but extremely annoying problem in the closing process. It seems like I've heard others complain about this, but I forget where. I'd like to write a letter to whoever regulates the real estate or mortgage industry just to add another voice and maybe get this fixed. Can anyone here advise me on who to write to? Attorney General? Here's what happened: we got a HUD-1 statement with estimates of our closing costs and everything. We know that they are estimates. We know that if there are discrepancies at the closing table we'd either need to write an additional check or recieve a small refund for the difference. We're not complaining about that. It seems that here in Virginia, the title companies all but refuse to get a more accurate estimate of the cash amount the buyer needs to bring to the table. Despite our realtor and our mortgage broker making repeated calls on our behalf, we couldn't get the number. So a few hours before closing, we went to the bank and got our cashier's check made out for $1000 more than the HUD-1 total. We were told that they won't accept a personal check for more than $1000 so we thought this would cover us and prevent delaying closing if we guessed wrong. An hour before our closing time, and 15 minutes *after* the banks closed for the day (around 2:30pmish) they finally called our realtor and told her the amount we needed to bring to the table. They ended up writing a refund check for over $6,000 because our final estimated cash-on-table amount was that much different from our HUD-1 total. We were lucky. What if the difference went the other way? We would have had to delay closing by a day so we could go back to the bank the next morning to get another cashier's check. Or worse, what if we were cash-poor and didn't *have* an additional $6000 on top of what the original HUD-1 said? There's no excuse in the world why they couldn't have told us a closer estimate the day before closing, yet they refused to. This isn't a fly-by-night title company, either. It's one of the big ones in this area with offices all over the region. How in the world do they think we can trust them to manage a huge monetary transaction like this (ours was a half-million dollar home purchase, which in this area is on the low end!) when they can't estimate the taxes and fees closer than $6000? Sheesh Sharon |
#3
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Lurker at Large wrote:
There's no excuse in the world why they couldn't have told us a closer estimate the day before closing, yet they refused to. This isn't a fly-by-night title company, either. It's one of the big ones in this area with offices all over the region. How in the world do they think we can trust them to manage a huge monetary transaction like this (ours was a half-million dollar home purchase, which in this area is on the low end!) when they can't estimate the taxes and fees closer than $6000? Sheesh Sharon There must have been something wrong with the title company. I got my estimate about 48 hours before the closing and it was 19 cents off! Cheers! D. ------------------------------------- ##-----------------------------------------------## Delivered via http://www.equity-loan.info Your home, its financing and everything about it no-spam access to your favorite newsgroup - misc.consumers.house - 4324 messages and counting! ##-----------------------------------------------## |
#4
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On Wed, 22 Jun 2005 19:01:45 -0500, someone wrote:
.....My reaction would be to tell all parties that I will show up for closing 24 hours after I get the HUD statement FAX'ed to me, and not a minute before. Hmmm. That's what you "would" do? Sounds suspiciously like big talk and nothing more. How often have you been able to get your way by doing this? In particular, since OP thinks it would have been awful if she had to delay closing by a day, would she be able to use such a tactic? Reply to NG only - this e.mail address goes to a kill file. |
#5
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In article ,
(v) wrote: On Wed, 22 Jun 2005 19:01:45 -0500, someone wrote: .....My reaction would be to tell all parties that I will show up for closing 24 hours after I get the HUD statement FAX'ed to me, and not a minute before. Hmmm. That's what you "would" do? Sounds suspiciously like big talk and nothing more. How often have you been able to get your way by doing this? In particular, since OP thinks it would have been awful if she had to delay closing by a day, would she be able to use such a tactic? You have to avoid getting yourself in a spot where you have no options. I have seen ruthless buyers go into a closing knowing that the sellers had a 2nd closing to buy their new place, and then they started demanding changes in the deal. They knew they at least had a chance since the seller had to sell to make the 2nd closing work. I like to make sure that I always know what is going on at a closing, and I make sure I don't get caught with my back to the wall. I have still had people try to pull stuff on me at the closing table. One that I recall is a party that hadn't moved out of the house, so I couldn't take possession. They had a 2nd closing, and had to sell. I wouldn't close unless they were fully moved out--I didn't want to take the risk of something happening after closing but before I could take possession. The two realtors ended up posting a bond that we could use as insurance, so with that protection, I did go ahead and close. Everything did turn out OK, but the movers did put a pretty big gouge in the drywall. That was OK since I always touch up the drywall and repaint when I take possession of a property. -john- -- ================================================== ==================== John A. Weeks III 952-432-2708 Newave Communications http://www.johnweeks.com ================================================== ==================== |
#6
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