Posted on October 6, 2010.
What is the difference between a title and warranty deeda My husband and I just bought our first house. My name is on the title, but not on the warranty deed. In fact, they were as unique warranty deed, but he corrected. Should I worry that my name was not on the warranty deeda
The act is a physical document. Title is an abstract concept on property rights. Having the title is primarily with property rights. Title insurance is like any other insurance, except that it is the assurance that you continue to have rights to property. So I guess what your name is on is actually a title insurance policy. Your name can not be on the title because the title is a concept or group rights, not a piece of paper.
An act can help build the case for the title but not the title. I could make a deed to your house right now it to your county courthouse and recorded it. It would be wrong, it would not grant me any rights and would not help me to take the title (or rights to) on the property.
If you're worried about not being on the record that you can have your husband waiver (using a Quit Claim Deed) its rights to both of you. So it is the grantor and you are both beneficiaries. If the correction has been made and registered, you probably have nothing to fear.