fire09 said:
Here's what happened. You guys agreed to provide a warranty for a term and set dollar amount. Your title company went and bought the ****tiest low cost warranty they could. The buyer, who is in real estate knows *insert ****ty warranty company name here* is either not worth the hassle to file a claim, OR they had their maintenance person go through the house with a fine tooth comb and make sure everything was solid, and decided the warranty wasn't necessary.
Since you agreed to provide the value of the warranty as part of your concession on the sale, that money goes to the buyer, not you. If you take that money, and the buyer takes you to court, you would likely lose if the contract was written correctly.
Just… no. Closing documents are legal docs. Without opening all of those back up, if the Title Company was arranging the warranty, etc. which they definitely were if they are sending the cash back to the OP then if the buyer took the seller to court for the $475, they'd have no leg to stand on in their case. In fact, if they even tried, a court would review and throw it out before the seller had to even waste their time.
There is no legal risk here. In fact, if you sent the buyer money back out of the contract then you are actually creating a legal risk (albeit probably a very small one) not only for you but also your wife, possibly her broker since they know about it, the other realtor and the seller.
People are bagging on this thread at this point but it is interesting in some ways. Loads of known real estate professionals in here seem confused by it and that's because not a lot of people think through the process and ask why when it comes to this stuff. I'm neither a real estate pro nor am I a lawyer but there's always a reason for the itemizations and conveyances in them.
The Title Company's job is to make sure they are all executed properly so if you are getting a refund after a buyer declined coverage whatever that means, then you have your answer.