Updated 8 days ago on . Most recent reply
Contract for Deed: "No Other Liens" Clause
The Deal That Disappeared: A Contract-for-Deed Cautionary Tale
Angela thought she owned rental house.
She had a signed contract.
She had possession and put a great tenant in place.
She made a $45,000 down payment.
She had been making $2,400 monthly payments for two years—on time.
From her perspective, she was the owner.
Legally? She was a ghost.
And when the foreclosure hit, there was nothing she could do about it.
The Setup (and the Miss)
The parties entered into a contract for deed—a common seller-financing tool. Title stays with the seller until the purchase price is paid in full. The buyer gets possession and pays over time.
That’s the deal.
But here’s what didn’t happen:
- The real estate agent who checked the box saying he represented the buyer actually did nothing—no advice, no warnings, no recommendation for title insurance. He just picked up the commission check.
- The contract was never recorded in the real estate records.
- No title insurance was obtained. If there had been, the title company would have made sure the contract or a memorandum of the contract, was recorded.
So the world outside that transaction?
It had no idea Angela existed. No demand letters. No notices. Not her name in the judicial foreclosure lawsuit or public notices for a non-judicial state.
What Happened Next
Ten days after signing the contract for deed, the seller did something that should make every investor pause:
👉 He placed a mortgage on the property.
Later, that mortgage was foreclosed.
And the buyer—the one making payments, pay the taxes and insurance, thinking she was “buying”—got wiped out.
Gone.
Because under most state's recording law, the mortgage lender was entitled to rely on the fact there were no title restrictions in the real estate records.
But Angela had given the world… nothing to find.
The mortgage trumped any rights Angela had. And when the lender foreclosed, Angela was just out in the cold.
The Legal Reality (Not the Marketing Version)
Contract-for-deed sellers love to describe this as:
“Like owning, just without the bank.”
That’s not wrong.
It’s just dangerously incomplete.
Because legally, until something is recorded, the buyer’s interest is:
- Invisible to third parties
- Unprotected against later liens
In this case, the only way the buyer survives is if she can prove the lender had actual notice of her contract.
Good luck with that.
That’s a litigation strategy, not a protection strategy.
A Clause That Should Have Saved It (But Didn’t)
The contract itself actually said the right thing:
“The purchaser shall not permit any lien to attach other than taxes and assessments.”
That sounds protective.
It isn’t.
Because:
- That clause binds the parties, not the outside world
- It does nothing against a lender who doesn’t know the buyer exists
- It’s a breach of contract claim against a possibly insolvent seller, not a shield
So yes—Angela can sue her seller.
But the property?
Still gone.
And guess what? The foreclosure investor signed a new lease with Angela's great tenant!
For Investors: This Is Not a Technicality—It’s the Entire Game
If you use contract-for-deed structures (and many do, especially in workforce housing), you need to understand this clearly:
Your real risk is not default—it’s priority.
You can underwrite payments perfectly and still lose everything if:
- The seller already has a mortgage or even liens (think IRS) against the property
- The seller re-encumbers the property
- The seller is sloppy (or worse)
- You don’t control recording
This is why sophisticated investors treat contract-for-deed like a secured transaction problem, not just a cash flow play.
The Fixes (None Optional)
If you’re advising a buyer—or structuring one yourself—this is the minimum:
1. Record Something
- Memorandum of contract, or
- Affidavit of purchaser’s interest, or
- The contract itself (if appropriate).
If it’s not recorded, it doesn’t exist to the world.
2. Get Title Insurance (Yes, Even Here)
Most buyers skip this because:
- “It’s seller financing”
- “We’re not getting a deed yet”
That’s exactly when you need it. If the seller already has liens against the property, you need to know. If you still want to proceed, make sure the seller's payments are made on time. Maybe by paying the mortgage lender directly, with the balance going to the seller.
That last one won’t save you if there is a large mortgage with many properties as collateral, but at least it will protect you 98% of the time.
3. Control Encumbrances
Require:
- Seller affidavit of no additional liens
- Covenant against further encumbrance
- Ongoing verification (not just at signing)
4. Monitor the Seller
This is the uncomfortable truth:
You are underwriting the seller’s behavior.
If they’re over-leveraged, disorganized, or “creative,” your risk just went up.
For Agents: This Is Where Liability Lives
Let’s be blunt.
If you represent the buyer as an agent and not just a transaction facilitator in one of these deals and you do not at least raise these issues, you are stepping into a problem.
The purchase agreement in this deal made the broker the buyer’s representative—creating fiduciary duties.
At a minimum, a competent agent should be asking and documenting that it asked:
- Are there any existing liens?
- Does the buyer understand the consequences of that?
- Will the buyer’s interest be recorded?
- How will the buyer make sure that is done?
- Is there title insurance?
- Who is responsible for explaining any title exceptions?
- What prevents the seller from borrowing against the property in the future? (Note: “I trust the seller” is never the right answer. What if the seller dies and an unknown 3rd party is in charge of things?)
You don’t have to solve it. That’s a lawyer issue.
But you absolutely have to surface it.
Because when this goes bad—and it does—you are the closest professional to the buyer.
And plaintiffs’ lawyers know it.
The Bottom Line
A contract for deed is not inherently bad.
But it is structurally fragile unless you treat it like what it is:
A financing arrangement sitting outside the normal protections of the recording system—unless you put those protections back in yourself.
This buyer didn’t.
And when the seller’s lender’s foreclosure came, her ownership interest didn’t lose.
It just… wasn’t there.
Most Popular Reply
TL/DR: AI generated story about a buyer who is an idiot and failed to properly file paperwork. Buyer's agent is an idiot and will be sued by buyer. Seller is a scammer and he's off laughing on an island somewhere.



