
They aren’t secrets actually but it sure seems like it sometimes when a transaction drags on several hours or days. I actually had a fun and fast transaction that closed last week and it doesn’t happen by chance. Some keys to make your closings fun & fast:
Plan & Discuss Closing Scheduling Up Front. If I’m Buyer’s attorney this is discussed with my client right up front as part of my initial contract review. There’s typically an estimated closing date in the contract and we discuss if that’s okay or an alternative and also what’s convenient in terms of a title company closing location. Once you’ve done this, communicate with the Seller’s attorney immediately about a convenient closing time and location with Seller/attorney. So an expecation has been set right up front.
Present a title commitment to Buyer’s attorney and Buyer’s lender about 14 days pre-closing. My rule on this is not too early but also not too late…if necessary err on the side of being early. I say not too early because you don’t want to waste time ordering/preparing/reviewing a title commitment if the deal feels shaky. Assuming you have 30-45 days in the transaction, get 10-15 days in, make sure the deal feels solid and then get your title commitment ready. In my experience these days there’s only 2-3 days between placing a title order and getting a title commitment back from your title company.
Seller’s attorney MUST get figures in early & accurately. You must get these in the business day prior to the closing. And accurately…scour the Contract and any agreed upon modifications so you properly include every credit, commission, attorney’s fees, others items being paid at closing (survey, association fees), ect. Changes to the HUD-1 Settlement Statement are a major cause of unnecessary delays.
Buyer’s lender MUST get figures in early & accurately. You don’t have a lot of control here as either attorney but you can barrage them with phone calls I guess.
Seller’s attorney must provide all necessary documents and the documents must be accurate. Seems like this is implicit as the Seller’s attorney but I’ve surely had closing’s where the documents were all wrong or a document was forgotten (the certificate of insurance for a condominium association is a popular culprit). My worst experience in this area was a new construction property where the Seller’s attorney didn’t appear at the closing AND his documents were all wrong…great lawyering buddy!
Buyer’s attorney must know the documents that are important (and not) and control her client(s) during signing. Right? The HUD-1 and all its figures, the Note, Mortgage and the Seller’s documents are critical…most of the rest are just repeating the same information 5 different ways. I think I used to waste a lot of time going through every document in detail as a younger attorney. Though, once in a while you’ll have a festidious client who demands discussion of each and every page, so you just gotta do it.
Lender’s should stay by the phone until a deal’s closed. Kinda obvious, no? Yet it’s amazing how often there are delays because a closer can’t get the lender’s closer on the phone. My fun and fast closing last week took about 45 minutes but it could have been 30 if the lender’s closer had been easier to track down.
Real estate closings are all about planning starting from the day a contract is signed. And slow closings aren’t the norm…a slow closing need not be the norm, nope, it just means somebody screwed up.
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Jul 08 2009