YES, that is what title insurance is for!
You file a claim with the title agency as to the disbute. Remember, only pre-existing conditions up to the date you purchased the property would be covered and you need to check your Owner's Policy to see if the issue you are concerned about was covered or excepted from coverage on your Policy before you file a claim. If the "cloud" is something that came about AFTER you purchased the property, it would not be covered.
The title company should have provided A insurance policy to you, it will have specific items that are included and excluded. You need to determine if you have A case or not. and talk to an attorney.
My texas cash out loan did not close according to the texas constitution can i make a claim against my title company
Susan Hendrickson found sue
Sue Hendrickson
Yes that is what title insurance is for. However, there is a very good chance that the title insurance company will sue the attorney who was supposed to do the title search in the first place as they obviously didn't do their job.
Before you try to sue the company, contact your title company and inform them of the error and tell them they need to fix it by filing the appropriate documents. You will learn if they filed the warranty deed and if it was recorded. You should have received a stamped copy of your warranty deed once it was recorded. If they can easily get this resolved, then you do not have issue with the title company. We ran into something similar where a piece of property was recorded with the wrong name. They were able to fix it within about 1 week. Best of luck
Sue Hendrecson
The tenses of "sue" are sue, sued, suing. I will sue the company. She sues everyone. (or She sued Tom.) He will be suing the company.
Easy, you go to company and sue it.
Sue Aucott has written: 'No Title Exists'
First, find the worm. Then, call the company, and make a complaint, or if your not as disgusted, just call your lawyer. Then make arrangements to see a judge. Finally, sue the company.