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It is giving someone a noble title, or raising their rank.
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.
consultant?
catch a cloud
Quit claim simply means that you are giving up all of your existing legal rights to a piece of property. You can even quit claim something that you never had rights to! It does not provide any warranty as to who owns the property, if there are liens on it or other problems with the title.
Someone that asserts a right or a title, an example would be ' a claimant to an estate'A person making a claim, esp. in a lawsuit or for a government-sponsored benefit.
YES, that is what title insurance is for!
If you were issued an Owner's Policy and now think there are defects in the chain of title, (the cloud must be from prior owners, not from the time you have owned it as title only covers the prior owners acts, not yours), then you can file a claim against the title agency that issued the Owner's Policy to you.You cannot file a claim if you do not have an Owner's Policy because the Lender/Mortgage Policy is issued only for the benefit of the Lender.
If you purchased an owner's title insurance policy and now you find the deed that conveyed the property to you was fraudulent you should make a claim against the title insurance AND against the malpractice insurance of the attorney who represented you when you purchased the property. Someone didn't do their job.
Someone donates a car by finding a worthy charity and cutting out the middlemen, then do the delivery themselves and giving the title and keys to the car to charity.
It would be possible to quit claim someone on the TITLE without them knowing. You would not have a way to make them liable for the note without their knowledge.