I made the following (rather timely given my previous post) comment on a post at The TNT Open House Blog.
One would have to be rather cavalier (or naive or dumb) not to read all loan documents before signing.
Sympathy for those who don’t? Please… If you’re going to give someone a signed blank check, don’t complain later when they cash it.
Sure there’s a lot of paper involved. But most of it is boiler plate. If you need more than an hour or so (typical time) to thoroughly understand what you’re signing, take the documents home to study and bring them back another day. (It’s unreasonable to ask the signer to spend 3-4 hours to sign.)
Or ask your agent to attend signing with you. If your agent won’t attend closing, or doesn’t know what’s important to check, you can find a buyer’s closing table checklist here to use as a guide to get you started.
One of the documents you’ll normally sign is a statement saying you have had the opportunity to read all documents and that you do understand them. If escrow urges you to sign before knowing/reading what you’re signing, I suggest changing escrow companies.












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1 Reviewing Closing Documents... again | Edgewood, WA Real Estate Blog // Jun 9, 2008 at 9:51 am
[...] This morning I read a post (Reading Redux) at Credit Slips regarding a familiar lament about not reading all documents at closing. It’s a subject I’ve visited before. [...]
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