Ditto. In California, the implosion of title plants 10 years ago into the 1-county megamall operations that cover all 58 counties, created many such problem.
On one side, I've been able to help a few clients reset a mortgage foreclosure "time clock" by helping them to take advantage of the flawed records to challenge their lenders.
However, ultimately, when the problem is with a pending sale transaction, a long explanation followed by disclaimers, exemptions and disclosures is only natural, and will certainly hold up a closing; bad economic effect in a slow economy.
I always check to make sure that the assessment rolls and tax rolls note the problem too, by contacting the public agency and working to find someone who can read a map and a deed: a challenge in modern times when education counts for little and computers are the "final word" of what's true. I know that neither roll establishes ownership, but when this stuff is often on the internet, it complicates our jobs with clients that much more when something is wrong and creates a false expectation (makes you look incompetent and a trouble maker to those who don't understand the issues).
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