Clear Title street

Honda : Other RARE, 1974 Honda MT-125 Elsinore Enduro, street legal, clear title. Honda : Other RARE, 1974 Honda MT-125 Elsinore Enduro, street legal, clear title. US $1,200.00 4d 2h 18m
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Clear Title street
Clear Title street
Do you know the title of this movie?


Hai.

Does anyone know the movie where this man dies, and he then goes
through several stages of his life, meeting people who played a part in them?
Like in one, he was a little boy playing on the street and then a car crashed because
of him and the driver died. Also, I remember an army scene, and one where the little girl
in the end asks him to 'wash her' with stones, to like, set her free and remove the burns.
Because then she could move on and his concience would be cleared or something.

Either way it was a great movie and I hate not being able to remember the title.

Thanks!
Yes that's it! Thank you so much!

Jakewilson.com - Street bike parts and accessories

Sounds like The Five People You Meet in Heaven.

Honda : Other RARE, 1974 Honda MT-125 Elsinore Enduro, street legal, clear title. Honda : Other RARE, 1974 Honda MT-125 Elsinore Enduro, street legal, clear title. US $1,200.00 4d 2h 18m
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1972 Camaro Z/28 Street Machine

Is the Title company responsible for their costly mistake?


Apparently at closing our seller listed the wrong unit # as our adress of our duplex so now that it's tax time it turns out that our title is wrong due to this mistake. Our title reads the neighbors address and vice versa (not the street number but the unit number) so now we have to pay to discharge our mortgages/ deed our titles to one another/and record new morgages because all of the paperwork -a cost of 300-500 per couple. It seems that the seller has no legal obligation to "fix" this mistake but shouldn't the tilte company/lawyers eat some of this cost since it was their duty to provide us with a "free and clear of record, marketable title"? This title is not "marketable" as it's incorrect and they should have done a title search. We've been getting the run-around from everyone but I don't see why we should have to pay "closing costs" all over again. Any advice would be appreciated!
FYI I purchased in Massachusetts.

You are not re-paying the "closing costs." You are paying the charges to correct an error at closing. If you read your mortgage documents you will find a signed "compliance agreement" (it may be called something else depending on local custom) wherein you agreed to correct any closing errors or erroneous documents that would impair your mortgage lender's interests. That being said, I cannot determine from your post who, if anyone, is obligated to re-imburse you for the error. It depends on whether the mistake in description was made in the contract, in which case it would be your error, or in the deed, which should be the closing agent's error.

4 comments to Clear Title street