Determination of insurability required.

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(1) No policy or contract of title insurance shall be written unless and until the title insurance company has caused to be conducted a reasonable examination of the title and has caused to be made a determination of insurability of title in accordance with sound underwriting practices for title insurance companies. Evidence thereof shall be preserved and retained in the files of the title insurance company or its agent for a period of not less than seven years after the policy or contract of title insurance has been issued. In lieu of retaining the original copy, the title insurance company, or the agent of the title insurance company, may, in the regular course of business, establish a system whereby all or part of these writings are recorded, copied, or reproduced by any photographic, photostatic, microfilm, microcard, miniature photographic, or other process which accurately reproduces or forms a durable medium for reproducing the original. This section shall not apply to either a company assuming no primary liability in a contract of reinsurance or a company acting as a coinsurer if one of the other coinsuring companies has complied with this section.

(2) A title insurance company shall not be obligated to make a written disclosure to its prospective insureds prior to the issuance of a title insurance policy of the following documents if a reasonable examination of title referred to in subsection (1) of this section reveals a recorded document that:

  1. Is a spurious lien or spurious document as defined in section 38-35-201, C.R.S.;

  2. Is not, according to sound underwriting practices for title insurance companies, animpairment of record concerning the property to be insured; or

  3. Although it may purport to do so, does not encumber the property to be insured.

Source: L. 69: p. 522, § 1. C.R.S. 1963: § 72-26-6. L. 97: Entire section amended, p. 38, § 4, effective March 20. L. 99: (1) amended, p. 27, § 1, effective August 4.


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