If there is one section of the Texas real estate exam that consistently causes the most trouble, it is contracts, deeds, and title.
Not because the ideas are impossible, but because this is where the exam blends:
โข Law
โข Process
โข Terminology
โข And consequences
You are no longer just identifying what property is. You are identifying how property legally moves from one party to another and what makes that transfer enforceable.
This guide walks you through:
โข What makes a real estate contract valid
โข The difference between void and voidable contracts
โข The Statute of Frauds
โข Essential elements of a deed
โข Types of deeds
โข Title and notice
โข Title insurance
โข Voluntary vs involuntary transfers
If you understand this post, a huge portion of the Texas exam becomes logic instead of memorization.
What Is a Real Estate Contract?
A real estate contract is a legally binding agreement that creates enforceable obligations between the parties.
For a contract to be valid, it must meet several essential tests. While wording varies slightly between textbooks, the ideas are consistent.
A valid real estate contract requires:
โข Competent parties
โข Mutual consent
โข A lawful objective
โข Consideration
โข An offer and acceptance
โข And compliance with the Statute of Frauds
If any essential element is missing, the contract may be void or voidable.
Void vs Voidable Contracts
This distinction appears constantly on the Texas exam.
Void contract
A contract that never had legal force.
Examples:
โข Contract for illegal activity
โข Contract with an incompetent party
โข Contract missing essential elements
A void contract is unenforceable by either party.
Voidable contract
A contract that is valid unless one party chooses to cancel it.
Examples:
โข Contract with a minor
โข Contract involving misrepresentation
โข Contract involving duress
A voidable contract is enforceable unless properly rescinded.
Exam shortcut:
Void = dead on arrival
Voidable = alive but cancelable
The Statute of Frauds
The Statute of Frauds requires certain contracts to be in writing to be enforceable.
Real estate contracts fall squarely under this rule.
In Texas, contracts for the sale of real property must be:
โข In writing
โข Signed by the party to be charged
Verbal real estate contracts are generally unenforceable, even if both parties agree.
This is why real estate transactions rely on written purchase agreements, listing agreements, and lease contracts.
If the exam asks why a verbal land sale is unenforceable, the answer is almost always Statute of Frauds.
From Contract to Conveyance
A contract creates the obligation to transfer property.
A deed is what actually transfers ownership.
They are not the same.
โข Contract = promise
โข Deed = performance
Understanding this difference answers many exam questions.
What Is a Deed?
A deed is a legal instrument used to transfer title to real property.
For a deed to be valid, it must contain certain essential elements.
The most commonly tested are:
โข Competent grantor
โข Identifiable grantee
โข Words of conveyance
โข Legal description of the property
โข Grantorโs signature
โข Delivery and acceptance
Notice what is missing.
The granteeโs signature is not required.
That is a favorite Texas exam trap.
Another major exam point:
The purchase price does not have to appear on the deed.
The legal description absolutely does.
Without a legal description, the deed fails.
Types of Deeds in Texas
Not all deeds offer the same level of protection.
Understanding this section alone answers many exam questions.
General Warranty Deed
This provides the greatest protection to the buyer.
The grantor warrants:
โข They own the property
โข They have the right to convey it
โข There are no undisclosed encumbrances
โข They will defend the title against all claims, past and present
If the exam asks which deed offers the most protection, the answer is general warranty deed.
Special Warranty Deed
This deed only protects against defects that occurred during the grantorโs ownership.
The grantor is not responsible for anything that happened before they owned the property.
Exam clue:
If the warranty is limited to the grantorโs ownership period, it is a special warranty deed.
Quitclaim Deed
A quitclaim deed transfers whatever interest the grantor may have, if any.
It makes no promises about ownership or title quality.
Quitclaim deeds are often used to:
โข Clear up title issues
โข Transfer between family members
โข Remove a cloud on title
On the exam:
Quitclaim = no warranties.
Title and Notice
Title refers to the legal evidence of ownership.
Ownership itself is possession.
Title is the proof.
Title is established and protected through:
โข Public records
โข Deeds
โข Title searches
โข Title insurance
Actual vs Constructive Notice
This concept shows up often.
Actual notice means someone was directly informed.
Constructive notice means information is legally presumed known because it was recorded in public records.
Recording a deed gives constructive notice to the world.
If a document is properly recorded, no one can later claim ignorance.
What Is Title Insurance?
Title insurance protects buyers and lenders from:
โข Title defects
โข Unknown liens
โข Recording errors
โข Forged documents
โข Ownership disputes
It does not prevent problems.
It protects against financial loss if they exist.
This is different from homeownerโs insurance, which protects against future events.
On the exam:
Title insurance = past problems
Home insurance = future problems
Clouds on Title
A cloud on title is anything that casts doubt on ownership.
Examples:
โข Unreleased liens
โข Boundary disputes
โข Missing heirs
โข Recording errors
Title companies exist to identify and clear these issues before closing.
Voluntary vs Involuntary Transfers
Property can transfer by choice or by law.
Voluntary transfers
โข Sale
โข Gift
โข Will
โข Trust conveyance
These are intentional.
Involuntary transfers
โข Foreclosure
โข Eminent domain
โข Tax sale
โข Adverse possession
โข Escheat
These occur without the ownerโs consent.
If the exam asks for involuntary alienation, foreclosure is almost always the safest choice.
Transfer After Death
Property can transfer after death by:
โข Will (testate)
โข Intestate succession
โข Trust
โข Life estate remainder
โข Survivorship
If someone dies without a will, Texas intestacy law controls who inherits.
Property does not freeze.
Ownership does not vanish.
The state steps in to determine lawful heirs.
Why This Matters on the Texas Exam
This section quietly touches almost everything else.
โข Financing questions rely on valid contracts
โข Closing questions rely on deeds
โข Lien questions rely on title
โข Probate questions rely on transfer methods
The exam often stacks concepts.
For example:
A buyer signs a contract.
A deed is recorded.
A lien is later discovered.
You are expected to know which law applies at each step.
If you are solid on:
โข Validity
โข Deed elements
โข Warranty differences
โข Constructive notice
โข Title protection
โข Transfer methods
the rest becomes dramatically easier.
Final Thoughts
This is where real estate stops being about houses and starts being about law.
But the law follows patterns.
Contracts create obligations.
Deeds perform them.
Title proves them.
Recording protects them.
Once you see those relationships, the exam stops feeling scattered and starts feeling organized.
That is exactly where confident test-takers live.
๐ Related Reading
โข Texas Property Ownership & Estates Explained
โข Texas Real Property vs Personal Property
โข Liens, Easements, and Encumbrances in Texas
โข Texas Real Estate Exam Study Hub



