Escrow & Title
A 'survey' of a Connecticut property is conducted to:
ADetermine the property's assessed value
BPrecisely locate and measure the property's boundaries and improvements✓ Correct
CDetect environmental contamination
DVerify the property's zoning classification
Explanation
A property survey, conducted by a licensed surveyor, precisely locates and measures the property's boundaries, identifies encroachments, and shows the relationship between the property lines and improvements.
Related Connecticut Escrow & Title Questions
- A Connecticut buyer purchases a home and gets a lender's title insurance policy at closing. Six months later, the buyer learns there is an unrecorded easement that allows the neighbor to cross the property. The buyer's title insurance will:
- A Connecticut title company discovers a 'cloud on title.' This means:
- Connecticut is an 'attorney closing state,' which means:
- Recording a deed in Connecticut's town land records provides:
- Which of the following would NOT be covered by a standard Connecticut owner's title insurance policy?
- In Connecticut, the deed is most commonly used to transfer title from seller to buyer at closing is the:
- A title search in Connecticut examines the public records to:
- A Connecticut deed must be delivered to the grantee within the life of the grantor to be valid because:
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