Contract For Deed
Contract for deed, also called a land contract or installation contract,
enables the seller to finance a buyer by permitting him to make a down payment
followed by monthly payments.
However, title remains in the name of the seller. In addition to its wide use
as a financing method as a land sale contract, it has also been a very effective financing tool in
several states like Michigan, Texas, Florida and Indiana just too mention a few,
as a means of selling homes during periods of tight money. For
example, a homeowner owes $25,000 on his home and wants to sell it for $85,000.
A buyer is found but does not have the $60,000 down payment necessary to assume
the existing home loan. The buyer does have $8,000, but for one reason or
another money is not available from institutional lenders. If the seller is
agreeable, the buyer can pay $8,000 and enter into an installment contract for
the remaining $77,000. The contract for deed will call for monthly payments by
the buyer to the seller that are large enough to allow the seller to meet the
payments on the $25,000 loan plus repay the $52,000 owed to the seller, with
interest. Unless property taxes and insurance are billed to the buyer, the
seller will also collect for these and pay them. When loan money is later
available from institutional lenders, the contract for deed and existing loan
are paid in full and title is conveyed to the buyer. Meanwhile the homeowner
continues to hold title and is responsible for paying the mortgage. In addition
to wrapping around a mortgage, an installment contract can also be used to wrap
around another installment contract, provided it does not contain an enforceable
alienation clause.
Because title is not conveyed until some later date, the buyer is in a
vulnerable position. It is possible that the buyer could make all the required
payments only to find that the title cannot be delivered because the seller died
or became legally incompetent, or because the seller did not pay the existing
mortgage payments as agreed, or because the property has become encumbered with
new liens against the seller. Commonly used safeguards are to (1) record the
contract, (2) have a neutral third party (escrow) collect the buyer's payments
and disburse them to existing lien holders and the seller, and (3) have the
seller sign a deed now and place it into escrow for delivery later.
Recording the contract puts the public on notice that the buyer has an
equitable interest in the property that is superior to subsequent encumbrances.
The use of a disbursing agent gives the buyer confidence that existing liens are
being paid. Holding the deed in escrow avoids death and incompetence
complications, but it does place a major responsibility on the escrow agent to
make certain the contract has been properly fulfilled before releasing the deed
to the buyer.
Contract For Deed to Bad Credit Mortgage
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