Contract Review — Before You Sign
A real attorney reads your contract, flags the traps, and helps you and your Realtor negotiate changes. Free. Included with every Williamson County closing.
Title Services. Your Attorney. Your Advocate. Your Closing. Same Price.
Title companies have attorneys who work for the title company — they don't represent you. Ours zealously works for you — reviewing your contract and representing you through every step of the home buying or selling process, whether you're closing in Franklin or anywhere else in Williamson County.
For every buyer. For every seller. All you have to do is ask.
Run before you sign or list. Catches roughly 95% of title problems while you still have options — not 24 hours before closing, when you don't.
A licensed Tennessee attorney reads it line by line and translates every clause into plain English. So you know exactly what you're signing — before you sign it.
Every number, days before closing day. No surprises at the table. No "wait, what's this fee?" moments. Just a clear picture, early.
Forward a quote from your lender, inspector, or insurance agent. We'll tell you if it's in line — or worth a second call. We don't sell any of those services. We just know what fair looks like.
A real attorney reads your contract, flags the traps, and helps you and your Realtor negotiate changes. Free. Included with every Williamson County closing.
A true attorney-client relationship with Jim Vanderpool — confidentiality, loyalty, and legal advice. A title company's attorney cannot offer any of those.
Full legal protection at standard title company pricing. Nothing extra for representation. 139 five-star reviews, 15,000+ closings.
Five-Star Google Reviews
Closings Completed
Middle Tennessee Experience
Most buyers find out what's in their contract on closing day. Most sellers find out about title problems 24 hours before closing. Most don't see a settlement statement until they're sitting at the table being asked to sign one. None of that has to happen — and when you work with the attorneys at Vanderpool Law on a Williamson County closing, none of it does.
Before you sign a purchase agreement, a listing agreement, or a builder contract, bring it to us. Our attorneys read it with you — explaining what every clause actually means for you, flagging the terms that shift risk onto your side, and suggesting language to negotiate before you sign. Most Williamson County buyers and sellers never have this conversation before signing. We think that's the wrong way to handle the biggest transaction of your life.
Before you sign or list a property, we can run a Presearch on it — a preliminary review of public records that surfaces roughly 95% of the title issues a full search would find. Old liens, heir claims, boundary disputes, undischarged mortgages, recorded easements that don't match what's on the ground — if any of those are lurking in the Williamson County records, you'll know about them early enough for our attorneys to work out a solution before closing day. Not 24 hours before. Weeks before.
This is something a Williamson County title company cannot offer — not because they don't want to, but because they aren't a law firm. A title company can run the search. Only a law firm can read it, give you legal advice about what it means, and represent you in fixing a problem.
A settlement statement is the document that lists every dollar moving at your closing — title fees, recording, taxes, prorations, payoff figures, commissions, lender charges, and what you actually walk away with. Most Williamson County buyers and sellers see it for the first time at the closing table, with the keys already on the line and a stack of signatures waiting. We send you a preliminary settlement statement well before closing day so you can read it without a clock running, ask questions, catch numbers that don't match what your lender or agent told you, and walk into closing knowing exactly what you'll write a check for or take home. Nothing hidden. Nothing last-minute.
Send us your quotes — your lender's loan estimate, your inspector's invoice, your homeowner's insurance binder, the Williamson County moving company that wants $4,000 — and we'll tell you whether the pricing is in line with what we typically see on Middle Tennessee closings. We're not insurance brokers and we don't sell loans, so we have no incentive to steer you. We just look at the number and tell you if it's reasonable, high, or worth a second call. A few minutes of attorney attention can save you four figures on a single line item.
Same price. More value.
Here's the math in plain English: what a title company charges just to help you sign papers is our total cost for everything. Your Contract Review. Your Presearch. Your Preliminary Settlement Statement. Your Savings Check. Your closing itself. All of it. Same money. Five pieces of real legal work instead of one — four of them free, the closing at title-company pricing. We add legal value across every Williamson County transaction.
*Rules and restrictions apply. See our Free Services: Rules & Restrictions.
Williamson County real estate transactions — from first-time buyers to luxury estates — deserve more than paperwork processing. At the same price as any title company, Vanderpool Law provides a real attorney-client relationship for buyers and sellers throughout Williamson County.
Look at any title company website. Most list their team and feature pictures of their attorneys. Across Middle Tennessee, most title companies are independently owned — often by attorneys. Here's what that doesn't mean:
Most people are shocked when they learn this. An attorney-client relationship isn't created by proximity, ownership structure, or a line on a website. It's created when an attorney agrees to represent you. That doesn't happen at a title company closing.
Many Middle Tennessee title companies now require buyers and sellers to sign a written disclaimer at the closing table. The disclaimer states, in plain language, that the attorney present does not represent the buyer or seller and that no attorney-client relationship exists.
“The attorney present at this closing does not represent the buyer or the seller. No attorney-client relationship is created by the attorney's presence at this closing.” — paraphrased from actual Middle Tennessee title company disclosures.
That's not Vanderpool Law's characterization. That is the title company's own position — in writing, signed by you — and most people never had any idea.
A title company is, at its core, an insurance agency. Its primary statutory function is selling title insurance. Along the way, it performs tasks that look a lot like law — drafting deeds, preparing settlement documents, explaining closing papers — work that Tennessee law calls “law business” (Tenn. Code Ann. § 23-3-101). But a title company is not a law firm. It doesn't have clients in the legal sense. It has customers.
Here's how that shows up in how they're regulated. In Tennessee, title companies are licensed by the Department of Commerce and Insurance — the same agency that regulates auto insurance agents, home insurance producers, barbers, cosmetologists, auctioneers, locksmiths, scrap metal dealers, and the funeral industry. It's a broad commercial licensing agency, not the body that governs lawyers.
Vanderpool Law is a law firm. We are regulated by the Tennessee Supreme Court and the Board of Professional Responsibility — the bodies that actually govern the practice of law in this state. That's not a small distinction. It's the difference between a business licensed to sell you a product and a law firm licensed to represent you.
Same services as a title company. Same price. Fundamentally different relationship.
Click any city for full local details — neighborhoods, title quirks, market context, and FAQs specific to that city.
1320 West Main St., Suite 201, Franklin, TN 37064
All deeds, deeds of trust, liens, and plats for real estate anywhere in Williamson County are filed at the Williamson County Register of Deeds — not the county courthouse. Vanderpool Law records documents there regularly. We know the staff, we know the procedures, and we know how to resolve recording issues when they arise.
| Williamson County Title Company | Vanderpool Law | |
|---|---|---|
| Who they represent | The transaction | You |
| Attorney-client relationship | None | Full |
| Legal advice | Cannot — by law | Yes |
| Free contract review | No | Yes |
| Free Presearch | No | Yes |
| Attorney-client privilege | No | Yes |
| Regulated by the Tennessee Bar | No | Yes |
| Cost | $$ | $$ (same) |
Here's something most buyers and sellers don't know: Tennessee is unique. The standard Tennessee Association of Realtors (TAR) purchase contract actually includes a designated place for the buyer to choose their own closing representation and for the seller to choose their own closing representation. Both parties have this right, written directly into the contract. There's a reason for that. Tennessee smartly recognized that buying or selling a home is the biggest financial transaction in most people's lives — and both sides deserve independent representation at the closing table. Not a shared neutral. Not a company that works for neither party. An advocate who works for you.
Let's be honest — a lot of people hear "attorney" and think "expensive." But the price is the same. Vanderpool Law charges the same closing fees as a title company. The difference isn't cost. The difference is what you get for your closing dollar.
At a title company, your money buys you help signing documents. That is, essentially, the whole job — they process paperwork and move money. At Vanderpool Law, for about the same money, your closing dollar also buys (at your request) a Contract Review before you sign, a preliminary title search before you close, and an attorney who represents you through the entire transaction. Same dollar. A lot more work on your behalf. A lot more protection at the table. That's not nothing — that's worth considering.
Make your closing dollar do more than just push paper. That's what the Tennessee Association of Realtors contract contemplated when it gave you the right to choose your own closing representation. Use that right.
When you close with Vanderpool Law, Jim Vanderpool is your attorney. Not the title company's attorney. Not the lender's attorney. Not a neutral facilitator. Yours. That means a real attorney-client relationship under Tennessee law — with everything that entails: confidentiality on everything you discuss, legal advice tailored to your situation, a duty of loyalty that requires Jim to put your interests first, and advocacy when something goes wrong. If Jim sees a problem in your contract, he tells you. If a title defect surfaces, he advises you on your options. If something goes sideways with the closing timeline, Jim pushes back — on your behalf.
Because Jim Vanderpool is your attorney — not a neutral closing facilitator — Vanderpool Law provides services that no Williamson County title company can legally offer:
Contract review before you sign. Most Williamson County buyers and sellers sign their purchase contract before they ever talk to the person handling their closing. That's backwards. Jim reviews your contract before you commit — catching unfavorable clauses, identifying weak inspection contingency language, flagging possession date risks, and explaining what every provision actually means for you.
Legal advice throughout the transaction. A title company's involvement starts when the contract hits their desk and ends when the deed is recorded. Jim's representation covers the entire transaction — from contract review through closing and beyond. When your inspector finds issues and you need to know your legal options, Jim advises you. When the lender changes terms at the last minute, Jim explains your rights. When timelines shift and you're worried about your rate lock, Jim tells you where you stand.
Representation when something goes wrong before closing. Deals fall apart. Deadlines get missed. Appraisals come in low. Title defects surface. When these things happen with a title company, you're on your own — they process the cancellation paperwork. When these things happen with Vanderpool Law, you have an attorney who can negotiate, advocate, and protect your earnest money.
Plain-English explanation of what you're signing. At a Williamson County title company closing, the stack of documents gets pushed across the table with tabs marked "sign here." At a Vanderpool Law closing, Jim walks you through every document and explains what it means — in language you actually understand. What happens if you miss a mortgage payment. What your title insurance actually covers. What that HOA rider means for your property rights.
Real answers to "what happens if..." questions. A title company's closing staff cannot answer legal questions. Jim can — and does. Every closing.
Attorney-client privilege on everything discussed. Every conversation you have with Jim is protected by attorney-client privilege. That doesn't exist at a title company. Period.
Don't take our word for it. Jim Vanderpool has earned 139 five-star Google reviews from real clients across Williamson County and Middle Tennessee. Read verified reviews from buyers and sellers just like you.
See All 139 ReviewsFull title services plus real attorney-client representation — at the same price as a Williamson County title company. 139 five-star reviews. 25 years. 15,000+ closings. Jim represents you.
Vanderpool Law • Our Franklin, TN office • Mon–Fri 9am–5pm