the only way that can happen is if realestate agents, lawyers
and banks are complicit or slack in some way. why wouldn't a
bank or a lawyer verify the ownership - in person if necessary?
my guess.. a lawyer is lazy and assumes that the papers or the
person in front of them are true, signs off the title, and
someone in the bank (wrt arranging the mortgage) is lazy or an
insider.
cbc is reporting that there is quite a racket going on about>people stealing property titles (under false identities) and
the only way that can happen is if realestate agents, lawyers>and banks are complicit or slack in some way. why wouldn't a
The problem, which should never have been allowed to
exist, is that they have replaced Title Searches with
Title Insurance.
To clarify, quite often the thieves get away with down
payments or mortgage funds but an Insurance company pays
for the problem.
I'm not right up to date on this but I do know that at one
time, someone who bought a house being sold by someone who
didn't own it, was allowed to keep the house since the
title was transferred legally, which was equally
ridiculous, but I *think* things have improved a bit since
then.
Here, they are supposed to do title searches (IIRC, that
the buyer pays for) to make sure the person selling the
home has the right to. Do they have such rules in Canada?
The problem, which should never have been allowed to exist, is that> they have replaced Title Searches with Title Insurance.
It just seems to easy to misrepresent oneself as the true owner>of a property. Meanwhile, no one seems to check with the
I actually ran across some info on it since posting this
and it's not quite as easy as it sounds, the 'sellers'
have to do an actual identity theft to pull it off, having
drivers license numbers and Social Insurance numbers and
such, but we know these things still happen fairly
frequently.
They mentioned on the news that it is run most often by
organized crime. Something like 30 homes in Toronto alone
have been subject to this in the past year, mostly
Mortgage fraud, not the sale of the house fraud, which is
much harder to pull off.
A story mentioned that in 4 cases the house was actually
sold, and one couple only found out about it because their
mortgage had been paid off - which would have to be done
before the house could be sold. (They were out of the
country for 4 years with the house rented out.)
It was mentioned that 'the system' believes the new owners
legally own the property but there's no further info on
what can be done to get it back. It's apparently a little
messier than buying a stolen car..
Everyone believes something should be done to prevent this
but it's one of those things where it will take time for
the law to catch up with the crime.. and I think That is
ridiculous too.. They should be able to pass something
virtually overnight to stop this. I'd imagine just making
the lawyer that put through the sale financially
responsible for the whole mess might put a stop to it
pretty quickly..
and it's not quite as easy as it sounds, the 'sellers'> have to do an actual identity theft to pull it off, having
Apparently we do not exist unless some flimsy document says so.>always patronized don't even allow them to access their money
I know people who have lost their IDs, and the banks they have
Yes.. I don't see why extra checks and balances can't be>implemented immediately. For starters, if I were the bank or
I am a victim of a fraudulent property transfer myself, and *I*>wasn't even informed by the deeds office or by the
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