Even if such places existed, how would the object get there in the first place? And how would it stay there?
Even so it's a good question. Science, often, is concerned with finding some fixed solution and seeing what happens when you change it slightly. Given that otherwise we wouldn't have the first clue what's going on now, let alone what might happen in future, this is the best way to try and understand a system. It's called, or certainly should be called, "instability analysis" (or in other contexts, "perturbation theory"), and is basically what Scientists spend their careers thinking of.
Why, by the way, "must" there be such points? In any simplified system, e.g. of two or three planets and a central star, such points to tend to crop up in special cases, but otherwise the only point of zero force is "at infinity" -- which in practice means nowhere.