©
1994 by Home Study, Inc. dba American Schools
Click on link to go to:
Table of Contents; Chapter I: Real Property;
Chapter II: Legal Ownership;
Chapter III: Agency & Ethics;
Chapter IV: Contracts;
Chapter V: Real Estate Mathematics;
Chapter VI: Financing;
Chapter VII: Mortgage Insurance;
Chapter VIII: Appraisal;
Chapter IX: Transfers of Real Estate;
Chapter X: Property Management;
Chapter XI: Land Control;
Chapter XII: Taxation;
Chapter XIII: Fair Housing Laws;
Chapter XIV: Macroeconomics;
Chapter XV: Legal Professional Requirements;
Chapter XVI: Notarial Law;
Chapter XVII: Selling Real Estate;
Chapter XVIII: Trust Funds Handling;
Glossary;
Index.
ABATMENT OF NUISANCE: Extinction or termination
of a nuisance.
ABSOLUTE
OWNERSHIP: See
FEE SIMPLE ESTATE.
ABSTRACT OF
JUDGMENT: A
condensation of the essential provisions of a court Judgment.
ABSTRACT OF
TITLE: A
summary or digest of all transfers, conveyances, legal proceedings, and any
other facts relied on as evidence of title, showing continuity of ownership,
together with any other elements of record which may impair title.
ABSTRACTION: A method of valuing land.
The indicated value of the improvement is deducted from the sale price.
ACCELERATED
COST RECOVERY SYSTEM: The system for figuring depreciation (cost recovery) for depreciable
real property acquired and placed into service after January 1, 1981. (ACRS)
ACCELERATED
DEPRECIATION: A
method of cost write‑off in which depreciation allowances are greater in
the first few years of ownership than in subsequent years. This permits an
earlier recovery of capital and a faster tax write‑off of an asset.
ACCELERATION
CLAUSE: A
condition in a real estate financing instrument giving the lender the power to
declare all sums owing lender immediately due and payable upon the happening of
an event, such as sale of the property, or a delinquency in the repayment of
the note.
ACCEPTANCE: The act of agreeing or
consenting to the terms of an offer thereby establishing "the meeting of
the minds" that is an essential element of a contract.
ACCESS RIGHT: The right of an owner to
have ingress and egress to and from owner's property over adjoining property.
ACCESSION: An addition to property through the efforts of man
or by natural forces.
ACCRETION: Accession by natural forces,
e.g., alluvium.
ACCRUED
DEPRECIATION: The
difference between the cost of replacement new as of the date of the appraisal
and the present appraised value.
ACCRUED ITEMS
OF EXPENSE: Those
incurred expenses which are not yet payable. The seller's accrued expenses are
credited to the purchaser in a closing statement.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT:
A formal
declaration made before an authorized person, e.g., a notary public, by a
person who has executed an instrument stating that the execution was his or her
free act. In this state an acknowledgment is the statement by an officer such
as a notary that the signatory to the instrument is the person represented to
be.
ACOUSTICAL
TILE: Blocks
of fiber, mineral or metal, with small holes or rough‑textured surface to
absorb sound, used as covering for interior walls and ceilings.
ACQUISITION: The act or process by which
a person procures property.
ACRE: A measure of land equaling 160 square rods, or
4,840 square yards, or 43,560 square feet, or a tract about 208.71 feet square.
ACTUAL
AUTHORITY: Authority
expressly given by the principal or given by the law and not denied by the
principal.
ACTUAL FRAUD: An act intended to deceive
another, e.g., making a false statement, making a promise without intending to
perform it, suppressing the truth.
ADJUSTABLE
RATE MORTGAGE (ARM): A mortgage loan which bears interest at a rate y subject to change
during the term of the loan, predetermined or otherwise.
ADJUSTMENTS: In appraising, a means by
which characteristics of a residential property dare regulated by dollar amount
or percentage to conform to similar characteristics of another ,residential
property.
ADMINISTRATOR:
A person
appointed by the probate court to administer the estate of a deceased person
who died intestate. (Administratrix, the feminine form.)
AD VALOREM: A Latin phrase meaning
"according to value." Usually used in connection with real estate
taxation.
ADVANCE: Transfer of funds from a
lender to a borrower in advance on a loan.
ADVANCE COMMITMENT: The institutional
investor's prior agreement to provide long
term financing upon completion of construction; also
known as a "take‑out" loan commitment.
ADVANCE FEES: A fee paid in advance of any services rendered.
Sometimes unlawfully charged in connection with that illegal practice of
obtaining a fee in advance for the advertising of property or businesses for
sale, with no intent to obtain a buyer, by persons representing themselves as
real estate licensees, or representatives of licensed real estate firms.
ADVERSE POSSESSION: A method of acquiring title
to real property through possession of the
property for a statutory period under certain conditions by a person other
than the owner of record.
AFFIANT: One who makes an affidavit or gives
evidence.
AFFIDAVIT: A statement or declaration reduced to writing sworn
to or affirmed before some officer who has authority to administer an oath or
affirmation.
AFFIDAVIT OF TITLE: A statement, in writing,
made under oath by seller or grantor acknowledged before a Notary Public in
which the affiant identifies himself or herself and affiant's marital status
certifying that since the examination of title on the contract date there are
no judgments, bankruptcies or divorces, no unrecorded deeds, contracts, unpaid
repairs or improvements or defects of title known to affiant and that affiant
is in possession of the property.
AFFIRM: To confirm, to aver, to ratify, to verify. To make a
declaration.
AFLB: Accredited Farm and Land Broker.
AGENCY: The relationship between principal and the
principal's agent which arises out of a contract, either expressed or implied,
written or oral, wherein the agent is employed by the principal to do certain
acts dealing with a third party.
AGENT: One who acts for and with authority from another
called the principal.
AGREEMENT: An exchange of promises, a mutual understanding or
arrangement; a contract.
AGREEMENT OF SALE: A written agreement or contract between
seller and purchaser in which they reach a "meeting of minds" on the
terms and conditions of the sale. The parties concur; are in harmonious
opinion.
AIR RIGHTS: The rights in real property to the reasonable use
of the air space above the surface of the land.
ALIENATION: The transferring of property to another; the
transfer of property and possession of lands, or other things, from one person
to another.
ALIENATION CLAUSE: A clause in a contract giving the lender
certain rights in the event of a sale or other transfer of mortgaged property.
ALLODIAL TENURE: A real property ownership system where
ownership may be complete except for those rights held by government. Allodial
is in contrast to feudal tenure. ALLUVIUM: The gradual increase of the earth on
a shore of an ocean or bank of a stream resulting from the action of the water.
ALTA OWNER'S POLICY: An owner's extended
coverage policy that provides buyers and owners the same protection the ALTA
policy gives to lenders.
ALTA TITLE POLICY: (American Land Title Association) A type of
title insurance policy issued by title insurance companies which expands the
risks normally insured against under the standard type policy to include
unrecorded mechanic's liens; unrecorded physical easements; facts a physical
survey would show; water and mineral rights; and rights of parties in
possession, such as tenants and buyers under unrecorded instruments.
AMENITIES: Satisfaction of enjoyable living to be derived from
a home; conditions of agreeable living or a beneficial influence from the
location of improvements, not measured in monetary considerations but rather as
tangible and intangible benefits attributable to the property, often causing
greater pride in ownership.
AMO: Accredited Management Organization.
AMORTIZATION: The liquidation of a financial obligation on an
installment basis; also, recovery over a period of cost or value.
AMORTIZED LOAN: A loan to be repaid, interest and principal,
by a series of regular payments that are equal or nearly equal, without any
special balloon payment prior to maturity. Also called a Level Payments Loan.
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE: The relative cost of credit
as determined in accordance with Regulation Z of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System for implementing the Federal Truth in Lending Act.
ANNUITY: A sum of money received at fixed intervals, such as
a series of assured equal or nearly equal payments to be made over a period of
time, or it may be a lump sum payment to be made in the future. The installment
payments due to the landlord under a lease is an annuity. So are the
installment payments due to a lender.
ANTICIPATION,
PRINCIPLE OF: Affirms
that value is created by anticipated benefits to be derived in the future.
APPELLANT: A party appealing a court
decision or ruling.
APPRAISAL: An estimate of the value of
property resulting from an analysis of facts about the property. An opinion of
value.
APPRAISER: One qualified by education,
training and experience who is hired to estimate the value of real and personal
property based on experience, judgment, facts, and use of formal appraisal
processes.
APPROPRIATION
OF WATER: The
taking, impounding or diversion of water flowing on the public domain from its
natural course and the application of the water to some beneficial use personal
and exclusive to the appropriator.
APPURTENANCE: That which belongs to
something, but not immemorially; all those rights, privileges, and improvements
which belong to and pass with the transfer of the property, but which are not
necessarily a part of the actual property. Appurtenances to real property pass
with the real property to which they are appurtenant, unless a contrary
intention is manifested. Typical appurtenances are rights‑of‑way,
easements, water rights, and any property improvements.
APPURTENANT: Belonging to; adjunct;
appended or annexed to. For example, the garage is appurtenant to the house,
and the common interest in the common elements of a condominium is appurtenant
to each apartment. Appurtenant items pass with the land when the property is
transferred.
APR: See ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE.
ARCHITECTURAL
STYLE: Generally
the appearance and character of a building's design and construction.
ARTICLES OF
INCORPORATION: An instrument setting forth poses under which a private corporation is
formed.
ASA: American Society of Appraisers.
ASSESSED
VALUATION: A
valuation placed upon a piece of property by a public authority as a basis for
levying taxes on the property.
ASSESSMENT: The valuation of property for the purpose of
levying a tax or the amount of the tax levied. .Also, payments made to a common
interest subdivision homeowners' association for maintenance and reserves.
ASSESSOR: The official who has the responsibility of
determining assessed values.
ASSIGNMENT: A transfer to another of any property in possession
or in action, or of any estate or right therein. A transfer by a person of that
person's rights under a contract.
ASSIGNMENT OF
RENTS: A
provision in a deed of trust (or mortgage) under which the beneficiary may,
upon default by the trustor, take possession of the property, collect income
from the property and apply it to the loan balance and the costs incurred by
the beneficiary.
ASSIGNOR: One who assigns or transfers
property.
ASSIGNS,
ASSIGNEES: Those
to whom property or interests therein shall have been transferred.
ASSUMPTION
AGREEMENT: An
undertaking or adoption of a debt or obligation primarily resting upon another
person.
ASSUMPTION FEE: A lender's charge for
changing over and processing new records for a new owner who is assuming an
existing loan.
ASSUMPTION OF
MORTGAGE: The
taking of a title to property by a grantee wherein grantee assumes liability
for payment of an existing note secured by a mortgage or deed of trust against
the property, becoming a co‑guarantor for the payment of a mortgage or
deed of trust note.
ATTACHMENT: The process by which real or
personal property of a party to a lawsuit is seized and retained in the custody
of the court for the purpose of acquiring jurisdiction over the property, to
compel an appearance before the court, or to furnish security for a debt or
costs arising out of the litigation.
ATTEST: To affirm to be true or
genuine; an official act establishing authenticity.
ATTORNEY IN FACT: One who is authorized
by another to perform certain acts for another under a power of attorney; power
of attorney may be limited to a specific act or acts or be general.
AVULSION: A sudden and perceptible loss of land by the action
of water as by a sudden change in the course of a river.
BACKFILL: The replacement of excavated
earth into a hole or against a structure.
BALANCE SHEET: A statement of the financial condition of a
business at a certain time, showing assets, liabilities, and capital.
BALLOON
PAYMENT: An
installment payment on a promissory note‑usually the final one for
discharging the debt‑which is significantly larger than the other
installment payments provided under the terms of the promissory note.
BARGAIN AND
SALE DEED: Any
deed that recites a consideration and purports to convey the real estate; a
bargain and sale deed with a covenant against the grantor's act is one in which
the grantor warrants that grantor has done nothing to harm or cloud the title.
BASE AND
MERIDIAN: Imaginary
lines used by surveyors to find and describe the location of private or public
lands. In government surveys, a base line runs due east and west, meridians run
due north and south, and are used to establish township boundaries.
BASIS: (1) Cost Basis‑The
dollar amount assigned to property at the time of acquisition under provisions
of the Internal Revenue Code for the purpose of determining gain, loss and
depreciation in calculating the income tax to be paid upon the sale or exchange
of the property. (2) Adjusted Cost Basis‑The cost basis after
the application of certain additions for improvements, etc., and deductions for
depreciation, etc.
BEARING WALL: A wall or partition which supports a part of a
building, usually a roof or floor above.
BENCH MARK: A monument used to establish the elevation of the
point, usually relative to Mean Sea Level, but often to some local datum.
BENEFICIARY: (1) One entitled to the benefit of a trust; (2) One
who receives profit from an estate, the title of which is vested in a trustee;
(3) The lender on the security of a note and deed of trust.
BEQUEATH: To give or hand down by will; to leave by will.
BEQUEST: Personal property given by the terms of a will.
BETTERMENT: An improvement upon property which increases the
property value and is considered as a capital asset as distinguished from
repairs or replacements where the original character or cost is unchanged.
BILL OF SALE: A written instrument given to pass title of
personal property from vendor to the vendee.
BINDER: An agreement to consider a down payment for the
purchase of real estate us evidence of good faith on the part of the purchaser.
Also, a notation of coverage on an insurance policy, issued by an agent, and
given to the insured prior to issuing of the policy.
BLANKET MORTGAGE: A single mortgage which covers more than one
piece of real property.
BLIGHTED AREA: A district affected by detrimental
influences of such extent or quantity that real property values have seriously
declined as a result of adverse land use and/or destructive economic forces;
characterized by rapidly depreciating buildings, retrogression and no
recognizable prospects for improvement. However, renewal programs and changes
in use may lead to resurgence of such areas.
BLOCKBUSTING: The practice on the part of unscrupulous
speculators or real estate agents of inducing panic selling of homes at prices
below market value, especially by exploiting the prejudices of property owners
in neighborhoods in which the racial make‑up is changing or appears to be
on the verge of changing.
BONA FIDE: In good faith; without fraud or deceit;
authentic.
BOND: Written evidence of an obligation given by a
corporation or government entity. A surety instrument.
BOOK VALUE: The current value for
accounting purposes of an asset expressed as original cost plus capital
additions minus accumulated depreciation.
BREACH: The breaking of a law, or failure of duty,
either by omission or commission.
BROKER: A person employed for a fee by another to carry on
any of the activities listed in the license law definition of a broker.
BROKER‑SALESPERSON RELATIONSHIP AGREEMENT: A written agreement
required by the regulations of the Real Estate Commissioner setting forth the
material aspects of the relationship between a real estate broker and each
salesperson and broker performing licensed activities in the name of the
supervising broker.
B.T.U.: British thermal unit. The quantity of heat required
to raise the temperature of one pound of water one degree Fahrenheit.
BUILDING CODE: A systematic regulation of construction of
buildings within a municipality established by ordinance or law.
BUILDING LINE: A line set by law a certain distance from a
street line in front of which an owner cannot build on owner's lot. (A setback
line.)
BUILDING, MARKET VALUE OF: The sum of money which the
presence of that structure adds to or subtracts from the value of the land it
occupies. Land valued on the basis of highest and best use.
BUILDING RESTRICTIONS: Zoning, regulatory
requirements or provisions in a deed limiting the type, size and use of a
building.
BUNDLE OF RIGHTS: All of the legal rights incident to ownership
of property including rights of use, possession, encumbering and disposition.
BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT: A federal bureau within the
Department of the Interior which manages and controls certain lands owned by
the United States.
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY: The
assets for an existing business enterprise including its goodwill. As used in
the Real Estate Law, the term includes "the sale or lease of the business
and goodwill of an existing business enterprise or opportunity."
BUY DOWN: See SUBSIDY BUYDOWN.
BUYER'S MARKET: The condition which exists when a buyer is
in a more commanding position as to price and terms because real property
offered for sale is in plentiful supply in relation to demand.
BYLAWS: Rules for the conduct of the internal affairs of
corporations and other organizations.
CAL VET PROGRAM: A program administered by the State
Department of Veterans Affairs for the direct financing of farm and home
purchases by eligible California veterans of the armed forces.
CC&Rs: Covenants, conditions and restrictions. The basic
rules establishing the rights and obligations of owners (and their successors
in interest) of real property within a subdivision or other tract of land in
relation to other owners within the same subdivision or tract and in relation
to an association of owners organized for the purpose of operating and
maintaining property commonly owned by the individual owners.
CCIM: Certified Commercial Investment Member.
CPM: Certified Property Manager, a designation of the
Institute of Real Estate Management.
CAPITAL ASSETS: Assets of a permanent nature used in the
production of an income such as land, buildings, machinery and equipment, etc.
Under income tax law, it is usually distinguishable from "inventory"
which comprises assets held for sale to customers in ordinary course of the
taxpayer's trade or business.
CAPITAL
GAIN: At resale of a capital
item, the amount by which the net
sale proceeds exceed the adjusted cost basis book value.) Used for
income tax computation. Gains are called of
holding period after acquisition. Usually taxed at lower rates than ordinary income.
CAPITALIZATION: In appraising determining
value of property by considering net income and percentage of reasonable
return on the investment. The value of an income property is determined by
dividing annual net income by the Capitalization Rate.
CAPITALIZATION RATE: The rate of interest which
is considered a reasonable return on the investment, and used in the process of
determining value based upon net income. It may also be described as the yield
rate that is necessary to attract the money of the average investor to a
particular kind of investment. In the case of land improvements which depreciate,
to this yield rate is added a factor to take into consideration the annual
amortization factor necessary to recapture the initial investment in
improvements. This amortization factor can be determined in various ways: (I)
straight‑line depreciation method, (2) Inwood Tables and (3) Hoskold
Tables. (To explore this subject in greater depth, the student should refer to
current real estate appraisal texts.)
CAP RATE: See. LIFE OF LOAN CAP.
CASEMENT WINDOWS: Frames of wood or metal which swing outward.
CASH FLOW: The net income generated b
no cash expenses.
CAVEAT EMPTOR: Let the buyer beware. The
buyer must examine the goods or property and buy at his or her own risk, absent
misrepresentation.
CERTIFICATE OF
ELIGIBILITY: Issued
by the government bearing evidence of individual's eligibility to obtain
Veterans Administration (GI) loan.
CERTIFICATE OF REASONABLE VALUE (CRV): The Federal Veterans
Administrative appraisal commitment of property value.
CERTIFICATE OF TAXES DUE: A written statement or
guaranty of the condition of the taxes on a certain property made by the County
Treasurer of the county wherein the property is located. Any loss resulting to
any person from an error in a tax certificate shall be paid by the county which
such treasurer represents.
CERTIFICATE
OF TITLE: A
written opinion by an attorney that ownership of the particular parcel of land
is as stated in the certificate.
CHAIN OF TITLE: A history of conveyances and encumbrances
affecting the title from the time the original patent was granted, or as far
back as records are available, used to determine how title came to be vested
in current owner.
CHANGE, PRINCIPLE OF: Holds that it is the future, not the past, which is of prime importance in estimating value. Change is largely result of cause and effect.
CHARACTERISTICS: Distinguishing features of a (residential) property.
CHATTEL
REAL: An
estate related to real estate, such as a lease on real property.
CHATTELS: Goods or every species of property movable
or immovable which are not real property. Personal property.
CHOSE IN ACTION: A personal right to something not presently
in the owner's possession, but recoverable by a legal action for possession.
CIRCUIT
BREAKER: (I)
An electrical device which automatically interrupts an electric circuit when an
overload occurs; may be used instead of a fuse to protect each circuit and can
be reset. (2) In property taxation, a method for granting property tax relief
to the elderly and disadvantaged qualified taxpayers by rebate, tax credits or
cash payments. Usually limited to homeowners and renters.
CLOSING: (1) Process by which all the parties to a
real estate transaction conclude the details Of a sale or mortgage. The process
includes the signing and transfer of documents and distribution of funds. (2)
Condition in description of real property by courses and distances at the
boundary lines where the lines meet to include all the tract of land.
CLOSING COSTS:
The
miscellaneous expenses buyers and sellers normally incur in the transfer of
ownership of real property over and above the cost of the property.
CLOSING
STATEMENT: An
accounting of funds made to the buyer and seller separately. Required by law to
be made at the completion of every real estate transaction.
CLOUD ON
TITLE: A
claim, encumbrance or condition which impairs the title to real property until
disproved or eliminated as for example through a quitclaim deed or a quiet
title legal action.
CODE OF ETHICS: A set of rules and principles expressing a
standard of accepted conduct for a professional group and governing the
relationship of members to each other and to the organization.
COLLATERAL: Marketable real or personal
property which a borrower pledges as security for a loan. In mortgage
transactions, specific land is the collateral. (See definition of Security
Interest.)
COLLATERAL SECURITY: A separate obligation attached to contract to
guarantee its performance; the transfer of property or of other contracts, or
valuables, to insure the performance of a principal agreement.
COLLUSION: An agreement between two
or more persons to defraud another of rights by the forms of law, or to obtain
an object forbidden by law.
COLOR OF TITLE: That which appears to be good title but which is not title in fact.
COMMERCIAL ACRE: A term applied to the remainder of an acre of newly subdivided land
after the area devoted to streets, sidewalks and curbs, etc., has been deducted
from the acre.
COMMERCIAL LOAN: A personal loan from a commercial bank, usually unsecured and short
term, for other than mortgage purposes.
COMMERCIAL PAPER: Negotiable instruments such as promissory notes, letters of credit and
bills of lading. Instruments developed under the law of merchant.
COMMISSION: An agent's compensation for performing the duties of the agency; in
real estate practice, a percentage of the selling price of property, percentage
of rentals, etc. A fee for services.
COMMITMENT: A pledge or a promise or
firm agreement to do something in the future, such as a loan company giving a
written commitment with specific terms of mortgage loan it will make.
COMMON AREA: The entire
common interest development except the separate interest therein.
COMMON INTEREST DEVELOPMENT: "Common interest
development" means a real property development:
(1) Which
consists or will consist of separately owned lots, parcels, areas, or spaces
with either or both of the following features:
(A) One or more
additional contiguous or noncontiguous lots, parcels, areas, or spaces owned in
common by the owners of the separately owned lots, parcels, areas, or spaces.
(B) Mutual,
common, or reciprocal interests in, or restrictions upon, all or a portion of
these separately owned lots, parcels, areas, or spaces, or both.
(2) And, in
which the owners of the separately owned lots, parcels, areas, or spaces have
rights, directly or indirectly, to the beneficial use and enjoyment of the
lots, parcels, areas, or spaces referred to in subparagraph (A) of paragraph
(1) or any one or more of them or portions thereof or interests therein, or the
interests or restrictions referred to in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (I).
The estate in a separately or commonly owned lot, parcel, area, or space may be an estate of inheritance or perpetual estate, an estate for life, an estate for years, or any combination of the foregoing.
Either
common ownership of the additional contiguous or noncontiguous lots, parcels,
or areas referred to in subparagraph (A) of paragraph (I) or the enjoyment of
the mutual, common, or reciprocal interests m, or restrictions upon, the
separately owned lots, parcels areas, or spaces pursuant to subparagraph (B) of
paragraph (1), or both, may be through ownership of shares of stock or
membership in an association or otherwise. Shares of stock, if any exist, shall
be deemed to be interests in a common interest development and real estate
development for purposes of subdivision (f) of Section 25100 of the
Corporations Code.
COMMON
INTEREST SUBDIVISION: Subdivided lands which include a separate interest in real property
combined with an interest in common with other owners. The interest in common
may be through membership in an association. Examples are condominiums and
stock cooperatives.
COMMON LAW: The body of law that grew from customs and
practices developed and used in England "since the memory of man runneth
not to the contrary."
COMMON STOCK: That class of corporate stock to which there is
ordinarily attached no preference with respect to the receipt of dividends or
the distribution of assets on corporate dissolution.
COMMUNITY PROPERTY: Property acquired by husband and/or wife
during a marriage when not acquired as the separate property of either spouse.
Each spouse has equal rights of management, alienation and testamentary
disposition of community property.
COMPACTION: Whenever extra soil is added to a lot to fill in
low places or to raise the level of the lot, the added soil is often too loose
and soft to sustain the weight of the buildings. Therefore, it is necessary to
compact the added soil so that it will carry the weight of buildings without
the danger of their tilting, settling or cracking.
COMPARABLE SALES: Sales which have similar characteristics as
the subject property and are used for analysis in the appraisal process.
Commonly called "comparables", they are recent selling prices of
properties similarly situated in a similar market.
COMPARISON APPROACH: A real estate comparison method which compares a given property with similar or comparable surrounding properties; also called market comparison.
COMPETENT: Legally qualified.
COMPETITION, PRINCIPLE OF: Holds that profits tend to
breed competition and excess profits tend to breed ruinous competition.
COMPOUND INTEREST: Interest paid on original principal and
also on the accrued and unpaid interest which has accumulated as the debt
matures.
CONCLUSION: The final estimate of value, realized from facts,
data, experience and judgment, set out in an appraisal. Appraiser's certified
conclusion.
CONDEMNATION: The act of taking private property for public use
by a political subdivision upon payment to owner of just compensation.
Declaration that a structure is unfit for use.
CONDITION: In contracts, a future and uncertain event which
must happen to create an obligation or which extinguishes an existent
obligation. In conveyances of real property conditions in the conveyance may
cause an interest to be vested or defeated.
CONDITION PRECEDENT: A qualification of a
contract or transfer of property, providing that unless and until a given event
occurs, the full effect of a contract or transfer will not take place.
CONDITION SUBSEQUENT: A condition attached to an
already‑vested estate or to a contract whereby the estate is defeated or the
contract extinguished through the failure or non‑performance of the
condition.
CONDITIONAL COMMITMENT: A commitment of a definite
loan amount for some future unknown purchaser of satisfactory credit standing.
CONDITIONAL ESTATE: Usually called, in California, Fee Simple
Defeasible. An estate that is granted subject to a condition subsequent. The
estate is terminable on happening of the condition.
CONDITIONAL SALE CONTRACT: A contract for the sale of
property stating that delivery is to be made to the buyer, title to remain
vested in the seller until the conditions of the contract have been fulfilled.
(See definition of Security Interest.)
CONDOMINIUM: An estate in real property
wherein there is an undivided interest in common in a portion of real property
coupled with a separate interest in space called a unit, the boundaries of
which are described on a recorded final map, parcel map or condominium plan.
The areas within the boundaries may be filled with air, earth, or water or any
combination and need not be attached to land except by easements for access
and support.
CONDOMINIUM DECLARATION: The document which
establishes a condominium and describes the property rights of the unit owners.
CONFESSION OF JUDGMENT: An entry of judgment upon
the debtor's voluntary admission or confession.
CONFIRMATION OF SALE: A court approval of the
sale of property by an executor, administrator, guardian or conservator.
CONFISCATION: The seizing of property
without compensation.
CONFORMITY, PRINCIPLE OF: Holds that the maximum of value is realized when a
reasonable degree of homogeneity of improvements is present. Use conformity is
desirable, creating and maintaining higher values.
CONSERVATION: The process of utilizing
resources in such a manner which minimizes their depletion.
CONSIDERATION: Anything given or promised by a party to induce another to enter into a
contract, e.g., personal services or even love and affection. It may be a
benefit conferred upon one party or a detriment suffered by the other.
CONSTANT: The percentage which, when applied directly to the
face value of a debt, develops the annual amount of money necessary to pay a
specified net rate of interest on the reducing balance and to liquidate the
debt in a specified time period. For example, a 6% loan with a 20 year
amortization has a constant of approximately 8y2%. Thus, a $10,000 loan
amortized over 20 years requires an annual payment of approximately $850.00.
CONSTRUCTION LOAN: A loan made to finance the actual
construction or improvement on land. Funds are usually dispersed in increments
as the construction progresses.
CONSTRUCTIVE EVICTION: Breach of a covenant of
warranty or quiet enjoyment, e.g., the inability of a lessee to obtain
.possession because of a paramount defect in title or a condition making
occupancy hazardous.
CONSTRUCTIVE FRAUD: A breach of duty, as by a person in a
fiduciary capacity, without an actual fraudulent intent, which gains an
advantage to the person at fault by misleading another to the other's
prejudice. Any act of omission declared by law to be fraudulent, without
respect to actual fraud.
CONSTRUCTIVE NOTICE: Notice of the condition of
title to real property given by the official records of a government entity
which does not require actual knowledge of the information.
CONTIGUOUS: In close proximity.
CONTOUR: The surface configuration of land. Shown on maps
as a line through points of equal elevation.
CONTRACT: An agreement to do or not to do a certain thing.
It must have four essential elements: parties capable of contracting, consent
of the parties, a lawful object, and consideration. A contract for sale of
real property must also be in writing and signed by the party or parties to be
charged with performance.
CONTRIBUTION, PRINCIPLE OF: A component part of a
property is valued in proportion to its contribution to the value of the whole.
Holds that maximum values are achieved when the improvements on a site produce
the highest (net) return, commensurate with the investment.
CONVENTIONAL MORTGAGE: A mortgage securing a loan
made by investors without governmental underwriting, i.e., which is not FHA or
VA guaranteed. The type customarily made by a bank or savings and loan
association.
CONVERSION: (1) Change from one legal form or use to another,
as converting an apartment building to condominium use. (2) The unlawful
appropriation of another's property, as in the conversion of trust funds.
CONVEYANCE: An instrument in writing used to transfer (convey)
title to property from one person to another, such as a deed or a trust deed.
COOPERATIVE (APARTMENT) An apartment unit owned by a corporation and in which tenancy in an apartment unit is obtained by purchase of shares of the stock of the corporation
and where the owner of such shares is entitled to occupy a specific apartment
in the building. In California, this type of ownership is called a "stock
cooperative".
CORNER INFLUENCE TABLE: A statistical table that
may be used to estimate the added value
of a corner lot.
CORPORATION: An entity established and ad treated by law as an individual or unit
with rights and liabilities, or both, distinct and apart from those of the
persons composing it. A corporation is a creature of law having certain powers
or duties of a natural persons. Being created by law it may continue for any
length of time the law prescribes.
CORPOREAL
RIGHTS: Possessory
rights in real property.
CORRECTION
LINES: A
system for compensating inaccuracies in the Government Rectangular Survey
System due to the curvature of the earth. Every fourth township line, 24 mile
intervals, is used as a correction line on which the intervals between the
north and south range lines are remeasured and corrected to a full 6 miles.
CORRELATION: A step in the appraisal process involving the
interpretation of data derived from the three approaches to value (cost, market
and income) leading to a single determination of value. Also frequently
referred to as "reconciliation."
CO‑SIGNER: A second party who signs a promissory note
together with the primary borrower.
COST APPROACH: One of three methods in the appraisal process. An
analysis in which a value estimate of a property is derived by estimating the
replacement cost of the improvements, deducting there from the estimated
accrued depreciation, then adding the market value of the land.
COTENANCY: Ownership of an interest in a particular parcel of
land by more than one person; e.g. tenancy in common, joint tenancy.
COVENANT: An agreement or promise to do or not to do a
particular act such as a promise to build a house of a particular architectural
style or to use or not use property in a certain way.
CRAWL HOLE: Exterior or interior opening permitting access
underneath building, as required by building codes.
CRB: Certified Residential Broker.
CRE: Counselor of Real Estate, Member of American
Society of Real Estate Counselors.
CREDIT: A bookkeeping entry on the right side of an
account, recording the reduction or elimination of an asset or an expense, or
the creation of or addition to a liability or item of equity or revenue.
CURABLE
DEPRECIATION: Items
of physical deterioration and functional obsolescence which are customarily
repaired or replaced by a prudent property owner.
CURRENT INDEX: With regard to an adjustable rate mortgage,
the current value of a recognized index as calculated and published nationally
or regionally. The current index value changes periodically and is used in
calculating the new note rate as of each rate adjustment date.
CURTAIL SCHEDULE: A listing of the amounts by which the
principal sum of an obligation is to be reduced by partial payments and of the
dates when each payment will become payable.
DAMAGES: The indemnity recoverable by a person who has
sustained an injury, either in his or her person, property, or relative rights,
through the act or default of another. Loss sustained or harm done to a person
or property.
DATA PLANT: An appraiser's file of information on real
estate.
DEBENTURE: Bonds issued without security, an obligation not
secured by a specific lien on property.
DEBIT: A bookkeeping entry on the left side of an
account, recording the creation of or addition to an asset or an expense, or
the reduction or elimination of a liability or item of equity or revenue.
DEBT: That which is due from one person or another;
obligation, liability.
DEBTOR: A person who is in debt; the
one owing money to another.
DECLINING
BALANCE DEPRECIATION: A method of accelerated depreciation allowed by the IRS in certain
circumstances. Double Declining Balance Depreciation is its most common form
and is computed by using double the rate used for straight line depreciation.
DECREE OF FORECLOSURE: Decree by a court ordering the sale of mortgaged
property and the payment of the debt owing to the lender out of the proceeds.
DEDICATION: The giving of land by its owner to a public use
and the acceptance for such use by authorized officials on behalf of the
public.
DEED: Written instrument which
when properly executed and delivered conveys title to real property from one
person (grantor) to another (grantee).
DEED IN LIEU OF FORECLOSURE: A deed to real property
accepted by a lender from a defaulting borrower to avoid the necessity of
foreclosure proceedings by the lender.
DEED OF TRUST: (See Trust Deed).
DEED
RESTRICTIONS: Limitations
in the deed to a property that dictate certain uses that may or may not be made
of the property.
DEFAULT: Failure to fulfill a duty
or promise or to discharge an obligation; omission or failure to perform any
act.
DEFEASANCE CLAUSE: The clause in a mortgage that gives the
mortgagor the right to redeem mortgagor's property upon the payment of
mortgagor's obligations to the mortgagee.
DEFEASIBLE FEE: Sometimes called a base fee or qualified
fee; a fee simple absolute interest in land that is capable of being defeated
or terminated upon the happening of a specified event.
DEFENDANT: A person against whom legal action is initiated
for the purpose of obtaining criminal sanctions (criminal defendant) or damages
or other appropriate judicial relief (civil defendant).
DEFERRED MAINTENANCE: Existing but unfulfilled
requirements for repairs and rehabilitation. Postponed or delayed maintenance
causing decline in a building's physical condition.
DEFERRED
PAYMENT OPTIONS: The privilege of deferring income payments to take advantage of
statutes affording tax benefits.
DEFICIENCY JUDGMENT: A judgment given by a
court when the value of security pledged for a loan is insufficient to pay off
the debt of the defaulting borrower.
DELEGATION OF
POWERS: The
conferring by an agent upon another of all or certain of the powers that have
been conferred upon the agent by the principal.
DEPOSIT RECEIPT: A term used by the real estate industry to
describe the written offer to purchase real property upon stated terms and
conditions, accompanied by a deposit toward the purchase price, which becomes
the contract for the sale of the property upon acceptance by the owner.
DEPRECIATION: Loss of value of property
brought about by age, physical deterioration or functional or economic obsolescence.
The term is also used in accounting to identify the amount of the decrease in
value of an asset that is allowed in computing the value of the property for
tax purposes.
DEPTH TABLE: A statistical table that may be used to estimate
the value of the added depth of a lot.
DESIST AND
REFRAIN ORDER: An order directing a person to stop from committing an act in violation
of the Real Estate Law.
DETERMINABLE FEE: An estate which may end on the happening of
an event that may or may not occur.
DEVISE: A gift or disposal of real property by last will
and testament. DEVISEE: One who receives a gift of real property by will.
DEVISOR: One who disposes of real property by will.
DIRECTIONAL
GROWTH: The
location or direction toward which the residential sections of a city are
destined or determined to grow.
DISCOUNT: To sell a promissory note before maturity at a
price less than the outstanding principal balance of the note at the time of
sale. Also an amount deducted in advance by the lender from the nominal
principal of a loan as part of the cost to the borrower of obtaining the loan.
DISCOUNT POINTS: The amount of money the borrower or seller
must pay the lender to get a mortgage at a stated interest rate. This amount is
equal to the difference between the principal balance on the note and the
lesser amount which a purchaser of the note would pay the original lender for
it under market conditions. A point equals one percent of the loan.
DISCRETIONARY
POWERS OF AGENCY: Those powers conferred upon an agent by the principal which empower the agent in certain circumstances to
make decisions based on the agent's own judgment.
DISINTERMEDIATION: The
relatively sudden withdrawal of substantial sums of money
savers have deposited with savings and loan associations, commercial
banks, and mutual
savings banks. This term can also be considered to include life
insurance policy purchasers
borrowing against the value
of their policies. The essence of this
phenomenon is financial
intermediaries losing within
a short period of time billions of dollars as owners of funds held
by those institutional
lenders exercise their prerogative of taking them out of the hands of these
financial institutions.
DISPOSABLE INCOME: The after‑tax
income a household receives to spend on
personal consumption.
DISPOSSESS: To deprive one of the use
of real estate.
DOCUMENTARY TRANSFER TAX: A state enabling act
allows a county to y o adopt a documentary transfer tax to apply on all
transfers of real property located in the county. Notice of payment is entered
on face of the deed or on a separate paper filed with the deed.
DOCUMENTS: Legal instruments such as
mortgages, contracts, deeds, options, wills, bills of sale, etc.
DONEE: A person who receives a
gift.
DONOR: a person who makes a gift.
DOUBLE DECLINING BALANCE
DEPRECIATIATION: See
DECLINING BAI,ANCE DEPRECIATION
DRAW: Usually
applies to construction loans when disbursement of a portion of the
mortgage is made in advance, as improvements to the property are made.
DUAL AGENCY: An agency relationship in which the agent acts concurrently for both of the principals in a transaction.
DUE ON SALE CLAUSE‑ An acceleration clause granting the
lender the right to demand full payment of the mortgage upon a sale of the
property.
DURESS: Unlawful constraint exercised upon a person
whereby he or she is forced to do
some act against his or her will.
EARNEST MONEY: Down payment made by a purchaser of real estate as
evidence of good faith. A deposit or partial payment.
EASEMENT: A right, privilege or interest limited to a
specific purpose which one party has in the land of another.
ECONOMIC LIFE: The period over which a property will
yield a return on the investment over and above the economic or ground rent due
to land.
ECONOMIC OBSOLESCENCE: A loss in value due to
factors away from the subject property but adversely affecting the value of the
subject property.
ECONOMIC RENT: The reasonable rental expectancy if the
property were available for renting at the time of its valuation.
EFFECTIVE AGE
OF IMPROVEMENT: The number of years of age that is indicated b the condition of the
structure, distinct from chronological age.
EFFECTIVE; DATE OF VALUE: The specific day the
conclusion of value applies.
EFFECTIVE INTEREST RATE: The percentage of interest
that is actually being Paid by the borrower for the use of the money, distinct
from nominal interest.
EMINENT DOMAIN: The right of the government to acquire property for necessary public or quasi‑public use by condemnation; the owner must be fairly compensated and the right of the private citizen to get paid is spelled out in the 5th Amendment to the United States Constitution.
ENCROACHMENT: An unlawful intrusion onto
another's adjacent property by improvements to real property, e.g. a swimming
pool built across a property line.
ENCUMBRANCE: Anything which affects or
limits the f property, e.g., mortgages or easements.
EQUITY: The interest or value
which an owner has in real estate over and above the liens
against it. Branch of
remedial justice by and through which relief is afforded to suitors in
courts
of equity.
EQUITY BUILD‑UP: The increase of owner's
equity in property due to mortgage principal reduction and value appreciation.
EQUITY
PARTICIPATION: A mortgage transaction in which the lender, in addition to receiving a
fixed rate of interest on the loan acquires an interest in the borrower's real
property, and shares in the profits derived from the real property.
EQUITY OF
REDEMPTION: The
right to redeem property during the foreclosure period, such as a mortgagor's
right to redeem within either 3 months or 1 year as may be permitted after
foreclosure sale.
EROSION: The wearing away of land
by the act of water, wind or glacial ice.
ESCALATION: The right reserved by the
lender to increase the amount of the payments and/or interest upon the
happening of a certain event.
ESCALATOR CLAUSE: A clause in a contract
providing for the upward or downward adjustment of certain items to cover
specified contingencies, usually tied to some index or event. Often used in
long term leases to provide for rent adjustments, to cover tax and maintenance
increases.
ESCHEAT: The reverting lacking.
ESCROW: The deposit of instruments
and/or funds with instructions with a third neutral party to carry out the
provisions of an agreement or contract.
ESCROW AGENT: The neutral third party
holding funds or something of value in trust for another or others.
ESTATE: As applied to real estate,
the term signifies the quantity of interest, share, right, equity, of which
riches or fortune may consist in real property. The degree, quantity, nature
and extent of interest which a person has in real property.
ESTATE OF INHERITANCE: An estate which may
descend to heirs. All freehold estates are estates of inheritance, except
estates for life.
ESTATE FOR LIFE: A possessory, freehold
estate in land held by a person only for the duration of his or her life or the
life or lives of another.
ESTATE FROM PERIOD TO PERIOD: An interest in land where there is no definite
termination date but the rental period is fixed at a certain sum per week,
month, or year. Also called a periodic tenancy.
ESTATE AT SUFFERANCE: An estate arising when the
tenant wrongfully holds over after the expiration of the term. The landlord has
the choice of evicting the tenant as a trespasser or accepting such tenant for
a similar term and under the conditions of the tenant's previous holding. Also
called a tenancy at sufferance.
ESTATE AT WILL: The occupation of lands and
tenements by a tenant for an indefinite period, terminable by one or both
parties.
ESTATE FOR YEARS: An interest in lands by
virtue of a contract for the possession of them for a definite and limited
period of time. May be for a year or less. A lease may be said to be an estate
for years.
ESTIMATE: A preliminary opinion of
value. Appraise, set a value.
ESTIMATED REMAINING LIFE: The period of time (years)
it takes for the improvements to become valueless.
ESTOPPEL: A legal theory under which a person is barred from
asserting or denying a fact because of the person's previous acts or words.
ETHICS: That branch of moral
science, idealism, justness, and fairness, which treats of the duties which a
member of a profession or craft owes to the public, clients or partner, and to
professional brethren or members. Accepted standards of right and wrong. Moral
conduct, behavior or duty.
ET
UX:
Abbreviation for 'et uxor'. Means "and wife."
EVICTION: Dispossession by process of
law. The act of depriving a person of the possession of lands in pursuance of
the judgment of a court.
EXCEPTIONS: Matters affecting title to a particular parcel of real property which are excluded from coverage of a title insurance policy.
EXCHANGE: A means of trading equities in two or more real properties, treated as a single transaction through a single escrow, of property to the State when heirs capable of inheriting are of truth, a promise made without deceive.)
EXCLUSION: General matters affecting title to real property
excluded from coverage of a title insurance policy.
EXCLUSIVE AGENCY LISTING: A listing agreement
employing a broker as the sole agent for the seller of real property under the
terms of which the broker is entitled to a commission if the property is sold
through any other broker, but not if a sale is negotiated by the owner without
the services of an agent.
EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO SELL LISTING: A listing agreement
employing a broker to act as agent for the seller of real property under the
terms of which the broker is entitled to a commission if the property is sold
during the duration of the listing through another broker or by the owner
without the services of an agent.
EXECUTE: To complete, to make, to perform, to do, to follow
out; to execute a deed, to make a deed, including especially signing, sealing,
and delivery; to execute a contract is to perform the contract, to follow out
to the end, to complete.
EXECUTOR: A man named in a will to carry out its provisions
as to the disposition of the estate of a deceased person. (A woman is
executrix.)
EXECUTORY CONTRACT: A contract in which something remains to be
done by one or both of the parties.
EXPENSES: Certain items which appear on a closing statement
in connection with a real estate sale.
FACADE: The front of a building, often used to refer to a
false front and as a metaphor.
FAIR MARKET VALUE: This is the amount of money that would be
paid for a property offered on the open market for a reasonable period of time
with both buyer and seller knowing all the uses to which the property could be
nut and with neither party being under pressure to buy or sell.
FANNIE MAE. An acronymic nickname for Federal National
Mortgage Association (FNMA).
FARMERS HOME
ADMINISTRATION: An agency of the Department of Agriculture. Primary responsibility is
to provide financial assistance for farmers and others living in rural areas
where financing is not available on reasonable terms from private sources.
FEDERAL
DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION: (FDIC) .Agency of the federal government which
insures deposits at commercial banks and savings banks.
FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK: (FHLB) A district bank of the
Federal Home Loan Bank System that lends only to member savings and loan
associations.
FEDERAL HOME
LOAN BANK BOARD: ( FHLBB ) The administrative agency that charters federal savings and
loan associations and exercises regulatory authority over the FHLB system.
FEDERAL HOME
LOAN MORTGAGE CORPORATION: An affiliate of the Federal Home Loan Bank which creates a secondary
money market in conventional residential loans and in FHA and VA loans by
purchasing mortgages from members of the Federal Reserve System and the Federal
Home Loan Bank System.
FEDERAL HOUSING ADMINISTRATION: (FHA) An agency of the
federal government that insures private mortgage loans for financing of new and
existing homes and home repairs.
FEDERAL LAND BANK SYSTEM: Federal government agency
making long term loans to farmers.
FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION: (FNMA) "Fannie Mae" a
quasi-public agency converted into a private corporation whose primary
function is to buy and sell FHA and VA mortgages in the secondary market.
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM: The federal banking system
of the United States under the control of a central board of governors (Federal
Reserve Board) involving a central bank in each of twelve geographical
districts with broad powers in controlling credit and the amount of money in
circulation.
FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION: An association chartered
by the FHLBB in contrast to a state‑chartered savings and loan
association.
FEDERAL
SAVINGS AND LOAN INSURANCE CORPORATION: (FSLIC) An agency of the federal government that
insures savers' accounts at savings and loan associations.
FEE: An estate of inheritance in real property.
b SIMPLE
DEFEASIBLE: An estate in fee subject to the occurrence of a condition
subsequent whereby the estate may be terminated.
FEE SIMPLE ESTATE: The greatest interest that one can have in
real property. An estate that is unqualified, of indefinite duration, freely
transferable and inheritable.
FEUDAL TENURE: A real property ownership system where ownership
rests with a sovereign who, in turn, may grant lesser interests in return for
service or loyalty. In contrast to Allodial tenure.
FEUDS: Grants of land.
FHLMC: See FEDERAL HOME LOAN MORTGAGE CORPORATION.
FIDELITY BOND:
A security
posted for the discharge of an obligation of personal services.
FIDUCIARY: A person in a position of
trust and confidence, as between principal and
broker; broker as fiduciary owes certain loyalty which cannot be
breached under the rules of agency.
FIDUCIARY
DUTY: That
duty owed by an agent to act in the highest good faith toward the principal and
not to obtain any advantage over the latter by the slightest misrepresentation,
concealment, duress or pressure.
FILTERING: The process whereby higher‑priced properties
become available to lower income buyers.
FINANCIAL
INTERMEDIARY: Financial
institutions such as commercial banks, savings and loan associations, mutual
savings banks and life insurance companies which receive relatively small sums
of money from the public and invest them in the form of large sums. A
considerable portion of these funds are loaned on real estate.
FINANCING PROCESS: The systematic 5 step
procedure followed by major institutional lenders in analyzing a proposed loan,
which includes: filing of application by a borrower; lender's analysis of
borrower and property; processing of loan documentation; closing (paying) the
loan; and servicing (collection and record keeping).
FINANCING STATEMENT: The instrument which is filed in order to give
public notice of the security interest and thereby protect the interest of the
secured parties in the collateral. (See definition of Security Interest and
Secured Party.)
FIRST MORTGAGE: A legal document pledging collateral for a loan (See
"mortgage") that has first priority over all other claims against the
property except taxes and bonded indebtedness. That mortgage superior to any
other.
FIRST TRUST DEED: A legal document pledging
collateral for a loan (See "trust deed") that has first priority over
all other claims against the property except taxes and bonded indebtedness.
That trust deed superior to any other.
FISCAL CONTROLS: Federal tax revenue and
expenditure policies used to control the level of economic activity.
FISCAL YEAR: A business or accounting
year as distinguished from a calendar year.
FIXITY OF LOCATION: The physical characteristic of real estate
that subjects it to the influence of its surroundings.
FIXTURES: Appurtenances attached to
the land or improvements, which usually cannot be removed without agreement as
they become real property; examples: plumbing fixtures, store fixtures built
into the property, etc.
FORECLOSURE: Procedure whereby property
pledged as security for a debt is sold to pay
the debt in event of default
in payments or terms.
FORFEITURE: Loss of money or anything of value, due to failure to perform.
FRANCHISE: A specified privilege awarded by a government or
business firm which awards an exclusive dealership.
FRAUD: The intentional and
successful employment of any cunning, deception, collusion, or artifice, used
to circumvent, cheat or deceive another person whereby that person acts upon it
to the loss of property and to legal injury. (Actual Fraud: A deliberate
misrepresentation or representation made in reckless disregard of its truth or
its falsity, the suppression
FRAUDS, STATUTE OF: (See Statute of Frauds.)
"FREDDIE MAC": See FEDERAL HOME LOAN MORTGAGE CORPORATION.
FREEHOLD ESTATE: An estate of indeterminable
duration, e.g., fee simple or life estate.
FRONTAGE: A term used to describe or
identify that part of a parcel of land or an improvement on the land which
faces a street. The term is also used to refer to the lineal extent of the land
or improvement that is parallel to and facing the street, e.g., a 75‑foot
frontage.
FRONT FOOT: Property measurement for
sale or valuation purposes; the property measured by the front linear foot on
its street line‑each front foot extending the depth of the lot.
FRONT MONEY: The minimum amount of money
necessary to initiate a real estate venture, to get the transaction underway.
FROSTLINE: The depth of frost
penetration in the soil. Varies in different parts of the country. Footings
should be placed below this depth to prevent movement.
FULLY INDEXED NOTE RATE: As related to adjustable
rate mortgages, the index value at the time of application plus the gross
margin stated in the note.
FUNCTIONAL OBSOLESCENCE: A loss of value due to
adverse factors from within the structure which affect the utility of the
structure, value and marketability.
FUTURE BENEFITS: The anticipated benefits
the present owner will receive from the property in the future.
GABLE ROOF: A pitched roof with
sloping sides. GAIN: A profit, benefit, or value increase.
GAMBREL ROOF: A curb roof, having a
steep lower slope with a flatter upper slope above.
GENERAL LIEN: A lien on all the property
of a debtor.
GIFT DEED: A deed for which there is
no consideration.
GOODWILL: An intangible but saleable
asset of a business derived from the expectation of continued public patronage.
GOVERNMENT NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION: An agency of HUD, which
functions in the secondary mortgage market primarily in special housing
programs. Commonly called by the acronymic nickname "Ginnie Mae"
(GNMA).
GOVERNMENT SURVEY: A method of specifying the location of
parcels of land using prime meridians, base lines, standard parallels, guide
meridians, townships and sections.
GRADE: Ground level at the foundation.
GRADUATED LEASE: Lease which provides for a varying rental rate,
often based upon future determination; sometimes rent is based upon result of
periodical appraisals; used largely in long‑term leases.
GRADUATED PAYMENT MORTGAGE: Provides for partially
deferred payments of principal at start of loan. (There are a variety of
plans.) Usually after the first five years of the loan terra the principal and
interest payments are substantially higher, to make up principal portion of
payments lost at the beginning of the loan. (See Variable Interest Rate.)
GRANT: A technical legal term in a deed of conveyance
bestowing an interest in real property on another. The words "convey"
and "transfer" have the same effect.
GRANT DEED: A limited warranty deed using the word
"grant" or like words that assures a grantee that the grantor has not
already conveyed the land to another and that the estate is free from
encumbrances placed by the grantor.
GRANTEE: A person to whom a grant is made.
GRANTOR: .A person who transfers his or her interest
in property to another by grant.
GRATUITOUS AGENT: A person not paid by the principal for
services on behalf of the principal, who cannot be forced to act as an agent,
but who becomes bound to act in good faith and obey a principal's instructions
once he or she undertakes to act as an agent.
GRI: Graduate, Realtors' Institute.
GRID: A chart used in rating the borrower risk, property
and the neighborhood.
GROSS
INCOME:
Total income from property before any expenses are deducted.
GROSS MARGIN: With regard to an adjustable
rate mortgage, an amount expressed as percentage points, stated in the note
which is added to the current index value on the rate adjustment date to
establish the new note rate.
GROSS NATIONAL
PRODUCT: (GNP)
The total value of all goods and services produced in an economy during a given
period of time.
GROSS RATE: A method of collecting
interest by adding total interest to the principal of the loan at the outset of
the term.
GROSS RENT
MULTIPLIER: A
number which, times the gross income of a property, produces an estimate of
value of the property. Example: The gross income from an unfurnished apartment
building is $200,000 Per annum. If an appraiser uses a gross multiplier of 7%,
then it is said that based on the gross multiplier the value of the building is
$1,400,000.
GROUND LEASE: An agreement for the use of
the land only, sometimes secured by improvements placed on the land by the
user.
GROUND RENT: Earnings of improved
property credited to earnings of the ground itself after allowance is made for
earnings of improvements; often termed economic rent.
HABENDUM CLAUSE: The "to have and to
hold" clause which may be found in a deed.
HEIR: One who inherits property
at the death of the owner of the land, if the owner has died without a will.
HIGHEST AND BEST USE: An appraisal phrase meaning that use which at the time of an
appraisal is most likely to produce the greatest net return to the land and/or
buildings over a given period of time; that use which will produce the greatest
amount of amenities or profit. This is the starting point for appraisal.
HIP ROOF: A pitched roof with sloping sides and ends.
HOLDER IN DUE COURSE: One who has taken a note, check or bill of exchange
in due course:
(1) Before it was overdue;
(2) In good faith and for value;
(3) Without knowledge that
it has been previously dishonored and without notice of any defect at the time
it was negotiated to him or her.
HOLDOVER TENANT: Tenant who remains
in possession of leased property after the expiration of the lease term.
HOMESTEAD (exemption): A statutory
protection of real property used as a home from the claims of certain creditors
and judgments up to a specified amount.
HOUSING FINANCIAL DISCRIMINATION ACT OF 1977: (Holden Act) California
Health and Safety Code Section 35800, et seq., designed primarily to eliminate
discrimination in lending practices based upon the character of the
neighborhood in which real property is located. (See Redlining.)
HUD: The Department of Housing
and Urban Development which is responsible for the implementation and
administration of U.S. government housing and urban development programs.
HUNCalBRED PERCENT LOCATION: A city retail business
location which is considered the best available for attracting business.
HYPOTHECATE: To pledge a thing as
security without the necessity of giving up possession of it.
IMPERATIVE NECESSITY: Circumstances under which an agent has expanded
authority in an emergency, including the power to disobey instructions where it
is clearly in the interests of the principal and where there is no time to
obtain instructions from the principal.
IMPOUNDS: A trust type account
established by lenders for the accumulation of borrowers funds to meet periodic
payment of taxes, FHA mortgage insurance premiums, and/or future insurance
policy premiums, required to protect their security. Impounds are usually
collected with the note payment. The combined principal, interest, taxes and
insurance payment is commonly termed a PITI payment.
INCOME (CAPITALIZATION)
APPROACH: One
of the three methods of the appraisal process generally applied to income
producing property, and involves a three‑step process (1) find net annual
income, (2) set an appropriate capitalization rate or "present worth"
factor, and (3) capitalize the income dividing the, net income by the
capitalization rate.
INCOMPETENT: One who is mentally incompetent, incapable; any
person who, though not insane, is by reason of old age, disease, weakness of
mind, or any other cause, unable, unassisted, to properly manage and take care
of self or property and by reason thereof would be likely to be deceived or
imposed upon by artful or designing persons.
INCORPOREAL RIGHTS: Nonpossessory rights in real
estate, arising out of ownership, such as rents.
INCREMENT: An increase. Most
frequently used to refer to the increase of value of land that accompanies
population growth and increasing wealth in the community. The term
"unearned increment" is used in this connection since values are
supposed to have increased without
effort on the part of the owner.
INDEMNITY AGREEMENT: An agreement by the maker
of the document to repay the addressee of the agreement up to the limit stated
for any loss due to the contingency stated on the agreement.
INDENTURE: A formal written instrument made between two or
more persons in different interests, such as a lease.
INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR: A person who acts for
another but who sells final results and whose methods of achieving those
results are not subject to the control of another.
INDORSEMENT: The act of signing one's name on the back of a
check or note, with or without further qualification.
INITIAL NOTE RATE: With regard to an adjustable rate mortgage,
the note rate upon origination. This rate may differ from the fully indexed
note rate.
INITIAL RATE DISCOUNT: As applies to an
adjustable rate mortgage, the index value at the time of loan application plus
the margin less the initial note rate.
INJUNCTION: A writ or order issued under the seal of a court
to restrain one or more parties to a suit or proceeding from doing an act which
is deemed to be inequitable or unjust in regard to the rights of some other
party or parties in the suit or proceeding.
INSTALLMENT NOTE: A note which provides for a series of periodic
payments of principal and interest, until amount borrowed is paid in full. This
periodic reduction of principal amortizes the loan.
INSTALLMENT REPORTING: A method of reporting
capital gains by installments for successive tax years to minimize the impact
of the totality of the capital gains tax in the year of the sale.
INSTALLMENT SALES CONTRACT: Commonly called contract
of sale or "land contract." Purchase of real estate wherein the
purchase price is paid in installments over a long period of time, title is
retained by seller, and upon default by buyer (vendee) the payments may be
forfeited.
INSTITUTIONAL LENDERS: A financial intermediary
or depository, such as a savings and loan association, commercial bank, or life
insurance company, which pools money of its depositors and then invests funds
in various ways, including trust deed and mortgage loans.
INSTRUMENT: A written legal document; created to effect the
rights of the parties, giving formal expression to a legal act or agreement for
the purpose of creating, modifying or terminating a right. Real estate lenders'
basic instruments are: promissory notes, deeds of trust, mortgages, installment
sales contracts, leases, assignments.
INTEREST: A portion, share or right in something. Partial,
not complete ownership. The charge in dollars for the use of money for a period
of time. In a sense, the "rent" paid for the use of money.
INTEREST EXTRA LOAN: A loan in which a fixed
amount of principal is repaid in installments along with interest accrued each
period on the amount of the then outstanding principal only.
INTEREST ONLY LOAN: A straight, non‑amortizing
loan in which the lender receives only interest during the term of the loan and
principal is repaid in a lump sum at maturity.
INTEREST RATE: The percentage of a sum of money charged for its
use. Rent or charge paid for use of money, expressed as a percentage per month
or year of the sum borrowed. INTERIM LOAN: A short‑term, temporary loan
used until permanent financing is available, e.g., a construction loan.
INTERMEDIATION: The process of pooling and
supplying funds for investment by financial institutions called intermediaries.
The process is dependent on individual savers placing their funds with these
institutions and foregoing opportunities to directly invest in the investments
selected.
INTERPLEADER: A court proceeding initiated by the stakeholder of
property who claims no proprietary interest in it for the purpose of deciding
who among claimants is legally entitled to the property.
INTERVAL OWNERSHIP: A form of timeshare ownership. (See
Timeshare Ownership).
INTESTATE: A person who dies having made no will, or one
which is defective in form, is said to have died intestate, in which case the estate descends to the heirs at law or next
of kin.
INVOLUNTARY
LIEN: A lien imposed against property without consent of an owner; example: taxes,
special assessments, federal income tax liens, etc.
IRREVOCABLE: Incapable
of being recalled or revoked, unchangeable.
IRRIGATION
DISTRICTS: Quasi‑political
districts created under special laws to provide for water services to property owners in the district; an operation
governed to a great extent by
law.
JOINT NOTE: A note signed by two or more
persons who have equal liability for payment.
JOINT TENANCY:
Undivided ownership of a property interest by two or more persons each of
whom has a right to an equal share in the interest and a right of
survivorship i.e., the right to share equally with other surviving joint
tenants in the interest of a deceased joint tenant.
JOINT VENTURE:
Two or more
individuals or firms joining together on a single project as partners.
JUDGMENT: The final determination of a
court of competent jurisdiction of a matter presented to it; money judgments
provide for the payment of claims presented to the court, or are awarded as
damages, etc.
JUDGMENT LIEN:
A legal
claim on all of the property of a judgment debtor which enables the judgment creditor to have the property sold for payment of the amount of the
judgment.
JUNIOR MORTGAGE:
A mortgage
recorded subsequently to another mortgage on the same property or made
subordinate by agreement to a later‑recorded mortgage.
JURISDICTION: The authority by which
judicial officers take cognizance of and decide causes; the power to hear arid
determine a cause; the right and power which a judicial officer has to enter
upon the inquiry.
LACHES: Delay or negligence in
asserting one's legal rights.
LAND: The material of the earth,
whatever may be the ingredients of which it is composed, whether soil, rock, or
other substance, and includes free or unoccupied space for an indefinite
distance upwards as well as downwards.
LAND CONTRACT:
A contract
used in a sale of real property whereby the seller retains title to the
property until all or a prescribed part of the purchase price has been paid.
Also commonly called a conditional sales contract, installment sales contract
or real property sales contract. (See REAL
PROPERTY SALES CONTRACT infra for statutory definition.)
LAND AND
IMPROVEMENT LOAN: A loan obtained by the builder‑developer for the purchase of land
and to cover expenses for subdividing.
LANDLORD: One who rents his or her property to another. The lessor under a lease.
LATE CHARGE: A charge assessed by a
lender against a borrower failing to make loan installment payments when due.
LATER DATE
ORDER: The commitment for an owner's title insurance policy
issued by a title insurance company which covers the seller's title as of the
date of the contract. When the sake closes the purchaser orders the title
company to record the deed to purchaser and bring down their examination to
cover this later date so as to show purchaser as owner of the property.
LATERAL SUPPORT: The support which the soil of an adjoining
owner gives to a neighbor's land.
LEASE: A contract between owner and tenant, setting
forth conditions upon which tenant may occupy and use the property and the term
of the occupancy. Sometimes used as an alternative to purchasing property
outright, as a method of financing right to occupy and use real property.
LEASEHOLD ESTATE: A tenant's right to occupy
real estate during the term of the lease. This is a personal property interest.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION: A land description recognized by law; a description by which property
can be definitely located by reference to government surveys or approved recorded
maps.
LESSEE: One who contracts to rent,
occupy, and use property under tenant.
LESSOR: An owner who enters into a
lease agreement with a tenant; a landlord.
LEVEL‑PAYMENT MORTGAGE: A loan on real estate that is paid off by making a
series of equal (or nearly equal) regular payments. Part of the payment is
usually interest on the loan and part of it reduces the amount of the unpaid
principal balance of the loan. Also sometimes called an "amortized
mortgage" or "installment mortgage."
LEVERAGE: The use of debt financing of an investment
to maximize the return per dollar of equity invested.
LIEN: A form of encumbrance
which usually makes specific property, security for the payment of a debt or
discharge of an obligation. Example: judgments, taxes, mortgages, deeds of
trust, etc.
LIFE .ESTATE: An estate or interest in
real property, which is held for the duration of the life of some certain
person. It may be limited by the life of the person holding it or by the life
of some other person.
LIFE OF LOAN CAP (CAP RATE): With regard to an
adjustable rate mortgage, a ceiling the note rate cannot exceed over the life
of the loan.
LIMITATIONS, STATUTE OF: The commonly used identifying term for various
statutes which require that a legal action be commenced within a prescribed
time after the accrual of the right to seek legal relief.
LIMITED PARTNERSHIP: A partnership consisting of a general partner or
partners and limited partners in which the general partners manage and control
the business affairs of the partnership while limited partners are essentially
investors taking no part in the management of the partnership and having no
liability for the debts of the partnership in excess of their invested capital.
LINTEL: A horizontal board that
supports the load over an opening such as a door or window.
LIQUIDATED
DAMAGES: A
sum agreed upon by parties to be full damages if a certain event occurs.
LIQUIDATED DAMAGES CLAUSE: A clause in a contract by which the parties by agreement
fix the damages in advance for a breach of the contract.
LIQUIDITY: Holdings in or the ability to convert assets to cash or its equivalent.
The ease with which a person is able to pay maturing obligations.
LIS PENDENS: A notice filed or recorded for the purpose of
warning all persons that the title or right to the possession of certain real
property is in litigation; literally "suit pending;" usually recorded
so as to give constructive notice of pending litigation.
LISTING: An employment contract between principal and agent
authorizing the agent to perform services for the principal involving the
latter's property; listing contracts are entered into for the purpose of
securing persons to buy, lease, or rent property. Employment of an agent by a
prospective purchaser or lessee to locate property for purchase or lease may,
be considered a listing.
LIVERY OF SEISIN (SEIZIN): The appropriate ceremony at
common law for transferring the possession of lands by a grantor to a grantee.
LOAN
ADMINISTRATION: Also called loan servicing. Mortgage bankers not only originate loans,
but also "service" them from origination to maturity of the loan
through handling of loan payments, delinquencies, impounds, payoffs and
releases.
LOAN APPLICATION:
The loan
application is a source of information on which the lender bases a decision to
make the loan; defines the terms of the loan contract, gives the name of the
borrower, place of employment, salary, bank accounts, and credit references, and
describes the real estate that is to be mortgaged. It also stipulates the
amount of loan being applied for and repayment terms.
LOAN CLOSING: When all conditions have been met, the loan
officer authorizes the recording of the trust deed or mortgage. The disbursal
procedure of funds is similar to the closing of a real estate sales escrow. The
borrower can expect to receive less than the amount of the loan, as title,
recording, service, and other fees may be withheld, or can expect to deposit
the cost of these items into the loan escrow. This process is sometimes called
"funding" the loan.
LOAN
COMMITMENT: Lender's
contractual commitment to make a loan based on the appraisal and underwriting.
LOAN‑VALUE RATIO: The percentage of a property's value that a lender
can or may loan to a borrower. For example, if the ratio is 80% this means that
a lender may loan 80% of the property's appraised value to a borrower.
MAI: Member of the Appraisal Institute. Designates a person who is a member of the American Institute of Real Estate Appraisers of the National Association of Realtors.
MARGIN OF SECURITY: The difference between the amount of the mortgage
loan (s) and the appraised value of the property.
MARGINAL LAND: Land which barely pays the
cost of working or using.
MARKET DATA APPROACH: One of the three methods in the appraisal process. A
means
of comparing similar type
properties, which have recently sold, to the subject property. Commonly used in
comparing residential properties.
MARKET PRICE: The price paid regardless of
pressures, motives or intelligence.
MARKET VALUE: The highest price in terms
of money which a property will bring in a competitive and open market and under
all conditions required for a fair sale, i.e., the buyer and seller acting prudently,
knowledgeably and neither affected by undue pressures.
MARKETABLE TITLE: Title which a reasonable
purchaser, informed as to the facts and their legal importance and acting with
reasonable care, would be willing and ought to accept.
MATERIAL FACT: A fact is material if it is one which the agent should realize would
be likely to affect the judgment of the principal in giving his or her consent
to the agent to enter into the particular transaction on the specified terms
MECHANIC'S LIEN: A lien create against real
property in favor of persons who have performed work or furnished materials for
the improvement of the real property.
MERIDIANS: Imaginary north‑south
lines which intersect base lines to form a starting point for the measurement
of land.
MESNE PROFITS:
Profits
from land use accruing between two periods as for example moneys owed to the
owner of land by a person who has illegally occupied the land after the owner
takes title, but before taking possession.
METES AND BOUNDS: A term used in describing the boundary
lines of land, setting forth all the boundary lines together with their
terminal points and angles. Metes (length or measurements) and Bounds
(boundaries) description is often used when much accuracy is required.
MILE: 5,280 feet.
MINOR: All persons under 18 years
of age.
MISPLACED
IMPROVEMENTS: Improvements
on land which do not conform to the most profitable use of the site.
MISREPRESENTATION: A false or misleading statement or assertion.
MOBILEHOME: As defined in Business and Professions Code Section 10131.6(c),
"mobile
home" means a structure
transportable in one or more sections, designed and equipped to contain not
more than two dwelling units to be used with or without a foundation system.
“Mobilehome" does not include a recreational vehicle, as defined in
Section 18010.5 of the Health and Safety Code, a commercial coach, as defined
in Section 18012 of the Health and Safety Code, or factory‑built housing,
as defined in Section 19971 of the Health and Safety Code.
MODULAR: A system for the
construction of dwellings and other improvements to real property through the
on‑site assembly of component parts (modules) that have been mass
produced away from the building site.
MOLDINGS: Usually patterned strips
used to provide ornamental variation of outline or contour, such as cornices,
bases, window and door jambs.
MONETARY CONTROLS: Federal Reserve tools for regulating the availability of money and
credit to influence the level of economic activity, such as adjusting discount
rates, reserve requirements, etc.
MONUMENT: A fixed object and point
established by surveyors to establish land locations. MORATORIUM: The temporary suspension, usually by statute, of the
enforcement of liability of debt. Temporary suspension of development or
utilities connections imposed by local government.
MORTGAGE: An instrument recognized by
law by which property is hypothecated to secure the payment of a debt or
obligation; a procedure for foreclosure in event of default is established by
statute.
MORTGAGE BANKER: A person whose principal
business is the originating, financing, closing, selling and servicing of loans
secured by real property for institutional lenders on a contractual basis.
MORTGAGE
CONTRACTS WITH WARRANTS: Warrants make the mortgage more attractive to the lender by providing
both the greater security that goes with a mortgage, and the opportunity of a
greater return through the right to buy either stock in the borrower's company
or a portion of the income property itself.
MORTGAGE GUARANTY INSURANCE: Insurance against
financial loss available to mortgage lenders from private mortgage insurance
companies (PMICs).
MORTGAGE
INVESTMENT COMPANY: A company or group of private investors that buys mortgages for
investment purposes.
MORTGAGE LOAN DISCLOSURE
STATEMENT:
The statement on a form approved by the Real Estate Commissioner which is
required by law to be furnished by a mortgage loan broker to the prospective
borrower of loans of a statutorily‑prescribed amount before the borrower
becomes obligated to complete the loan.
MORTGAGEE: One to whom a mortgagor gives a mortgage to secure
a loan or performance of an obligation; a lender or creditor. (See definition
of secured party.)
MORTGAGOR: One who gives a mortgage on his or her property to
secure a loan or assure performance of an obligation; a borrower. (See
definition of Debtor.)
MULTIPLE LISTING: A listing, usually an exclusive right to
sell, taken by a member of an organization composed of real estate brokers,
with the provisions that all members will have the opportunity to find an
interested buyer; a cooperative listing insuring owner property will receive a
wider market exposure.
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE: An association of real
estate agents providing for a pooling of listings and the sharing of
commissions on a specified basis.
MUTUAL SAVINGS BANKS: Financial institutions
owned by depositors each of whom has rights to net earnings of the bank in
proportion to his or her deposits.
MUTUAL WATER COMPANY: A water company organized
by or for water users in a given district with the object of securing an ample
water supply at a reasonable rate; stock is issued to users.
NAR: National Association of Realtors.
NAREB: National Association of Real Estate Brokers.
NARRATIVE
APPRAISAL: A
summary of all factual materials, techniques and appraisal methods used by the
appraiser in setting forth his or her value conclusion.
NEGATIVE
AMORTIZATION: Occurs
when monthly installment payments are insufficient to pay the interest
accruing on the principal balance, so that the unpaid interest must be added to
the principal due.
NEGOTIABLE: Capable of being negotiated,
assignable or transferable in the ordinary course of business.
NET INCOME: The money remaining after expenses are deducted
from income; the profit. NET LEASE: A lease requiring a lessee to pay charges
against the property such as taxes, insurance and maintenance costs in addition
to rental payments.
NET LISTING: A listing which provides that the agent may retain
as compensation for agent's services all sums received over and above a net
price to the owner.
NOMINAL
INTEREST RATES: The percentage of interest that is stated in loan documents. NOTARY
PUBLIC: An appointed officer with authority to take the acknowledgment of
persons executing documents, sign the certificate, and affix official seal.
NOTE: A signed written instrument acknowledging a debt
and promising payment, according to the specified terms and conditions. A
promissory note.
NOTE RATE: This rate determines the amount of interest
charged on an annual basis to the borrower‑also called the "accrual
rate", "contract rate" or "coupon rate".
NOTICE: (1) Actual Notice‑Express or implied
knowledge of a fact. (2) Constructive Notice‑A fact, imputed to a person
by law, which should have been discovered because of the person's actual notice
of circumstances and the inquiry that a prudent person would have been expected
to make. (3) Legal Notice‑Information required to be given by law.
NOTICE OF
NONRESPONSIBILITY: A notice provided by law designed to relieve property owner from
responsibility for the cost of unauthorized work done on the property or
materials furnished therefore; notice must be verified, recorded and posted.
NOTICE TO
QUIT: A
notice to a tenant to vacate rented property.
NOVATION: The substitution or exchange
of a new obligation or contract for an old one by the mutual agreement of the
parties.
NULL AND VOID:
Of no legal
validity or effect.
OBSOLESCENCE: Loss in value due to reduced desirability and
usefulness of a structure because its design and construction become obsolete;
loss because of becoming old‑fashioned and not in keeping with modern
needs, with consequent loss of income. May be functional or economic.
OFFER TO PURCHASE: The proposal made to an owner of property
by a potential buyer to purchase the property under stated terms.
OFFSET STATEMENT: Statement by owner of
property or owner of lien against property setting forth the present status of
liens against said property.
OPEN‑END MORTGAGE: A mortgage containing a
clause which permits the mortgagor to borrow additional money after the loan
has been reduced without rewriting the mortgage.
OPEN HOUSING LAW: Congress passed a law in
April 1968 which prohibits discrimination in the sale of real estate because of
race, color, or religion of buyers.
OPEN LISTING: An authorization given by
a property owner to a real estate agent wherein said agent is given the
nonexclusive right to secure a purchaser; open listings may be given to any
number of agents without liability to compensate any except the one who first
secures a buyer ready, willing and able to meet the terms of the listing, or
secures the acceptance by the seller of a satisfactory offer.
OPINION OF TITLE: An attorney's written evaluation of the condition of the title to a
parcel of land after examination of the abstract of title.
OPTION: A right given for a consideration to purchase or lease a property upon
specified terms within a specified time, without obligating the party who
receives the right to exercise the right.
ORAL CONTRACT: A verbal agreement; one which is not reduced to writing.
ORIENTATION: Placing a structure on its lot with regard to its exposure to the rays
of the sun, prevailing winds, privacy from the street and protection from
outside noises.
OSTENSIBLE AUTHORITY: That authority which a third person reasonably
believes an agent possesses because of the acts or omissions of the principal.
OVE&MPROVEMENT: An improvement which is not the highest and best use
for the site on which it is placed by reason of excess size or cost.
OWNERSHIP: The right of one or more persons to possess and use property to the
exclusion of all others. A collection of rights to the use and enjoyment of
property.
PACKAGE MORTGAGE: A type of mortgage used in home financing covering real property,
improvements, and movable equipment/ appliances.
PARAMOUNT
TITLE: Title
which is superior or foremost to all others.
PARTICIPATION: Sharing of an interest in a property by a lender. In addition to base interest
on mortgage loans on income properties, a percentage of gross income is
required, sometimes predicated on certain conditions being fulfilled, such as a
minimum occupancy or a percentage of net income after expenses, debt service
and taxes. Also called equity participation or revenue sharing.
PARTIES (PARTY): Those entities taking part in a transaction as a principal, e.g.,
seller, buyer, or lender in a real estate transaction.
PARTITION: A division of real or personal property or the proceeds there from
among co‑owners.
PARTITION ACTION: Court proceedings by which co‑owners seek to sever their joint
ownership.
PARTNERSHIP: A decision of the California Supreme Court has defined a partnership in
the following terms: "A partnership as between partners themselves may be
defined to be a contract of two or more persons to unite their property, labor
or skill, or some of them, in prosecution of some joint or lawful business, and
to share the profits in certain proportions." A voluntary association of
two or more persons to carry on a business or venture on terms of mutual
participation in profits and losses.
PARTY WALL: A wall erected on the line between two adjoining properties, which are
under different ownership, for the use of both properties.
PAR VALUE: Market value, nominal value.
PATENT: Conveyance of title
to government land.
PAYMENT ADJUSTMENT DATE: With regard to an adjustable rate mortgage, the date
the borrower's monthly principal and interest payment may change.
PAYMENT CAP: With regard to an adjustable rate mortgage, this limits the amount of
increase in the borrower's monthly principal and interest at the payment
adjustment date, if the principal arid interest increase called for by the
interest rate increase exceeds the payment cap percentage. This limitation is
often at the borrower's option and may result in negative amortization.
PAYMENT RATE: With respect to an adjustable rate mortgage, the
rate at which the borrower repays the loan‑reflects buydowns or payment
caps.
PENALTY: An extra payment or charge required of the
borrower for deviating from the terms of the original loan agreement. Usually
levied for being late in making regular payment or for paying off the loan
before it is due, known as "late charges" and "prepayment penalties."
PERCENTAGE LEASE: Lease on the property, the rental
for which is determined by amount of business done by the lessee; usually a
percentage of gross receipts from the business with provision for a minimum
rental.
PERIMETER
HEATING: Baseboard
heating, or any system in which the heat registers are located along the
outside walls of a room, especially under the windows.
PERIODIC
INTEREST RATE CAP: With respect to an adjustable rate mortgage, limits the increase or
decrease in the note rate at each rate adjustment, thereby limiting the
borrower's payment increase or decrease at the time of adjustment.
PERSONAL
PROPERTY: Any
property which is not real property.
PHYSICAL
DETERIORATION: Impairment of condition. Loss in value brought about by wear and tear,
disintegration, use and actions of the elements; termed curable and incurable.
PLAINTIFF: In a court action, the one who sues; the complainant.
PLANNED DEVELOPMENT: A subdivision consisting
of separately owned parcels of land together with membership in an association
which owns common area. Sometimes the owners of separate interests also have an
undivided interest in the common area.
PLANNED UNIT DEVELOPMENT: (PUD) A term sometimes
used to describe a planned development. A planning and zoning term describing
land not subject to conventional zoning to permit clustering of residences or
other characteristics of the project which differ from normal zoning.
PLANNING
COMMISSION: An
agency of local government charged with planning the development, redevelopment
or preservation of an area.
PLAT (of survey): A map of land made by a surveyor
showing the boundaries, buildings, and other improvements.
PLEDGE: The depositing of personal property by a debtor
with a creditor as security for a debt or engagement.
PLEDGEE: One who is given a pledge or a security.
(See definition of Secured Party.)
PLEDGOR: One who offers a pledge or
gives security. (See definition of debtor.)
PLOTTAGE: A term used in appraising to designate the
increased value of two or more contiguous lots when they are joined under
single ownership and available for use as a larger single lot. Also called
assemblage.
PLOTTAGE INCREMENT: The appreciation in unit value created by
joining smaller ownerships into one large single ownership.
POINTS: See Discount Points.
POLICE POWER: The right of the State to enact laws and enforce them for the order,
safety, health, morals and general welfare of the public.
POWER OF ATTORNEY: A written instrument whereby a principal gives authority to an agent. The
agent acting under such a grant is sometimes called an attorney in fact.
POWER OF SALE: The power of a mortgagee or trustee when the instrument so
provides, to sell the secured property without judicial proceedings if a
borrower defaults in payment of the promissory note or otherwise breaches the
terms of the mortgage or deed of trust.
PREFABRICATED HOUSE: A house manufactured and
sometimes partly assembled before delivery to building site.
PREFERRED STOCK: A class of corporate stock
entitled to preferential treatment such as priority in distribution of
dividends.
PREPAID ITEMS OF EXPENSE: Prorations of prepaid items of expense which are
credited to the seller in the closing escrow statement.
PREPAYMENT: Provision made for loan
payments to be larger than those specified in the note.
PREPAYMENT PENALTY: The charge payable to a
lender by a borrower under the terms of the loan agreement if the borrower pays
off the outstanding principal balance of the loan prior to its maturity.
PRESCRIPTION: The means of acquiring incorporeal interests in land, usually an
easement, by immemorial or long continued use. The time is ordinarily the term
of the statute of limitations.
PRESUMPTION: An assumption of fact that the law requires to be made from another
fact or group of facts found or otherwise established in the action.
PRIMA FACIE: Latin meaning first sight, a fact presumed to be true until disproved.
PRINCIPAL: This term is used to mean the employer of an agent; or the amount of
money borrowed, or the amount of the loan. Also, one of the main parties in a
real estate transaction, such as a buyer, borrower, seller, lessor.
PRINCIPAL NOTE: The
promissory note which is secured by the mortgage or trust deed.
PRIOR LIEN: A lien which is senior or superior to others.
PRIORITY OF LIEN: The order in which liens are given legal precedence or preference.
PRIVATE MORTGAGE INSURANCE: Mortgage guaranty insurance available to conventior4al
lenders on the first, high risk portion of a loan (PMI).
PRIVITY: Mutual relationship to the same rights of property, contractual
relationship.
PRIVITY OF
CONTRACT: The
relationship which exists between the persons who are parties to a contract.
PROCURING CAUSE: That cause originating
from a series of events that, without break in continuity, results in the prime
object of an agent's employment producing a final buyer; the real estate agent
who first procures a ready, willing, and able buyer for the agreed upon price
and terms and is entitled to the commission.
PROGRESS PAYMENTS: Scheduled, periodic, and
partial payment of construction loan funds
to a builder as each construction stage is completed.
PROGRESSION, PRINCIPLE OF: The worth of a lesser valued residence tends to be
enhanced by association with
higher valued residences in the same area.
PROMISSORY NOTE: Following a loan commitment from the lender, the borrower signs a note,
promising to repay the loan under stipulated terms. The promissory note
establishes personal liability for its payment. The evidence of the debt.
PROPERTY: Everything capable of being owned and acquired lawfully. The rights of
ownership. The right to use, possess, enjoy, and dispose of a thing in every
legal way and to exclude everyone else from interfering with these rights.
Property is classified into two groups personal property and real property.
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT: A branch of the real estate business involving the
marketing, operation, maintenance and day‑to‑day financing of
rental properties.
PRO RATA: In proportion; according to
a certain percentage or proportion of a whole.
PROBATION: Adjustments of interest, taxes, and insurance, etc., on a pro rata
basis as of the closing or agreed upon date. Fire insurance is normally paid
for three years in advance. If a property is sold during this time, the seller
wants a refund on that portion of the advance payment that has not been used at
the time the title to the property is transferred. For example, if the property
is sold two years later, seller will want to receive 1/3 of the advance premium
that was paid. Usually done in escrow by escrow holder at time of closing the
transaction.
PROBATION OF TAXES: To divide or prorate the taxes equally or
proportionately to time of use, usually between seller and buyer.
PROXIMATE CAUSE: That cause of an event which, in a natural and continuous
sequence unbroken by any new cause, produced that event, and without which the
event would not have happened. Also, the procuring cause.
PUBLIC RECORDS: Records
which by law impart constructive notice of matters relating to land.
PUBLIC TRUSTEE: The county public official whose office has
been created by statute to whom title to real property in certain states, e.g.,
Colorado, is conveyed by Trust Deed for the use and benefit of the beneficiary,
who usually is the lender.
PURCHASE AND INSTALLMENT
SALEBACK:
Involves purchase of the property upon completion of construction and immediate
saleback on a long‑term installment contract.
PURCHASE OF LAND, LEASEBACK
AND LEASEHOLD MORTGAGES: An arrangement whereby land is purchased by the lender and leased
back to the developer with a mortgage negotiated on the resulting leasehold of
the income property constructed. The lender receives an annual ground rent,
plus a percentage of income from the property.
PURCHASE AND LEASEBACK: Involves the purchase of
property by buyer and immediate leaseback to seller.
PURCHASE MONEY MORTGAGE OR TRUST DEED: A trust deed or mortgage
given as part or all of the purchase consideration for real property. In some
states the purchase money mortgage or trust deed loan can be made by a seller
who extends credit to the buyer of property or by a third party lender
(typically a financial institution) that makes a loan to the buyer of real
property for a portion of the purchase price to be paid for the property. In
many states there are legal limitations upon mortgagees and trust deed
beneficiaries collecting deficiency judgments against the purchase money
borrower after the collateral hypothecated under such security instruments has
been sold through the foreclosure process. Generally no deficiency judgment is
allowed if the collateral property under the mortgage or trust deed is
residential property of four units or less with the debtor occupying the
property as a place of residence.
QUANTITY SURVEY: A highly technical process in arriving at
cost estimate of new construction and sometimes referred to in the building
trade as the "price take‑off" method. It involves a detailed
estimate of the quantities of raw material (lumber, plaster, brick, cement,
etc.,) used as well as the current price of the material and installation
costs. These factors are all added together to arrive at the cost of a
structure. It is usually used by contractors and experienced estimators.
QUARTER ROUND: A molding that presents a
profile of a quarter circle.
QUIET ENJOYMENT: Right of an owner or tenant to the use of
the property without interference of possession.
QUIET TITLE: A court action brought to
establish title; to remove a cloud on the title.
QUITCLAIM
DEED: A deed
to relinquish any interest in property which the grantor may have, without any
warranty of title or interest.
RADIANT
HEATING: A
method of heating, usually consisting of coils, or pipes placed in the floor,
wall, or ceiling.
RANGE: A strip or column of land six miles wide,
determined by a government survey, running in a north‑south direction,
lying east or west of a principal meridian.
RANGE LINES: A series of government survey lines running north
and south at six‑mile intervals starting with the principal meridian and
forming the east and west boundaries of townships.
RATE ADJUSTMENT DATE: With respect to an
adjustable rate mortgage, the date the borrower's note rate may change.
RATIFICATION: The adoption or approval of an act performed on behalf of a person
without previous authorization, such as the approval by a principal of
previously unauthorized acts of an agent, after the acts have been performed.
READY, WILLING AND ABLE BUYER: One who is fully prepared to enter into the
contract, really wants to buy, and unquestionably meets the financing
requirements of purchase.
REAL ESTATE: (See real property. )
REAL ESTATE BOARD:
An organization whose members consist primarily of real estate
brokers and sales persons.
REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT TRUST: (See REIT).
REAL ESTATE SETTLEMENT PROCEDURES ACT (RES",):
A federal law requiring the disclosure to borrowers of settlement (closing)
procedures and costs by means of a pamphlet and forms prescribed by the United
States Department of Housing and Urban Development.
REAL ESTATE SYNDICATE: An organization of
investors usually in the form of a limited
partnership who have joined together for the purpose
of pooling capital for the acquisition of real property interests.
REAL ESTATE TRUST: A special
arrangement under Federal and State law whereby investors may pool funds for
investments in real estate and mortgages and yet escape corporation taxes,
profits being passed to individual investors who are taxed.
REAL PROPERTY: In the strict legal sense, land, appurtenances, that which is affixed
to the land, and that which by law is immovable. It usually refers to the
"bundle of rights" inherent in ownership.
REAL PROPERTY LOAN LAW: Article 7 of Chapter 3 of the Real Estate Law under
which a real estate licensee negotiating loans secured by real property within
a specified range is required to give the borrower a statement disclosing the
costs and terms of the loan and which also limits the amount of expenses and
charges that a borrower may pay with respect to the loan.
REAL PROPERTY SALES CONTRACT: An agreement to convey
title to real property upon satisfaction of specified conditions which does not
require conveyance within one year of formation of the contract.
NET LISTING A real estate
broker holding active membership in a real estate board affiliated with the
National Association of Real Estate Brokers.
REALTOR®: A real estate broker
holding active membership in a real estate board affiliated with the National
Association of Realtors.
RECAPTURE: The process of recovery by
an owner of money invested by employing the use of a rate of interest necessary
to provide for the return of an investment; not to be confused with interest
rate, which is a rate of return on an investment.
RECONVEYANCE: The transfer of the title
of land from one person to the immediate preceding owner. This instrument of
transfer is commonly used to transfer the legal title from the trustee to the
trustor (borrower) after a trust deed debt has been paid in full.
RECORDING: The process of placing a
document on file with a designated public official for public notice. This
public official is usually a county officer known as the County Recorder who
designates the fact that a document has been presented for recording by placing
a recording stamp upon it indicating the time of day and the date when it was
officially placed on file. Documents filed with the Recorder are considered to
be placed on open notice to the general public of that county. Claims against
property usually are given a priority on the basis of the time and the date
they are recorded with the most preferred claim going to the earliest one
recorded and the next claim going to the next earliest one recorded, and so on.
This type of notice is called "constructive notice" or "legal notice."
REDEEM: To buy back; repurchase; recover.
REDEMPTION: Buying back one's property
after a judicial sale.
REDLINING: A lending policy, illegal in California of denying
real estate loans on properties in older, changing urban areas, usually with large
minority populations, because of alleged higher lending risks without due
consideration being given by the lending institution to the creditworthiness of
the individual loan applicant.
REFINANCING: The paying‑off of an existing obligation and
assuming a new obligation in its place. To finance anew, or extend or renew
existing financing.
REFORMATION: An action to correct a
mistake in a deed or other document.
REHABILITATION:
The
restoration of a property to satisfactory condition without drastically
changing the plan, form or style of architecture.
REIT: A Real Estate Investment Trust is a business trust
which deals principally with interest in land‑generally organized to
conform to the Internal Revenue Code.
RELEASE CLAUSE: A stipulation that upon the payment of a
specific sum of money to the holder of a trust deed or mortgage, the lien of
the instrument as to a specifically described lot or area shall be removed from
the blanket lien on the whole area involved.
RELEASE DEED: An instrument executed by the mortgagee or the
trustee reconveying to the mortgagor or trustor the real estate which secured
the loan after the debt has been paid in full.
REMAINDER: An estate which takes effect after the termination
of the prior estate, such as a life estate. A future possessory interest in
real estate.
REMAINDER
DEPRECIATION: The
possible future loss in value of an improvement to real property.
RENEGOTIABLE RATE MORTGAGE: A loan secured by a long
term mortgage which provides for renegotiation, at pre‑determined
intervals, of the interest rate (for a maximum variation of five percent over
the life of the mortgage.)
REPLACEMENT COST: The cost to replace a structure with one
having utility equivalent to that being appraised, but constructed with modern
materials and according to current standards, design and layout.
REPRODUCTION
COST: The
cost of replacing the subject improvement with one that is the exact replica
having the same quality of workmanship, design and layout, or cost to duplicate
an asset.
RESCISSION: The cancellation of a contract and restoration of
the parties to the same position they held before the contract was entered
into.
RESCISSION OF CONTRACT: The abrogation or
annulling of contract; the revocation or repealing of contract by mutual consent
by parties to the contract, or for cause by either party to the contract.
RESERVATION: A right retained by a grantor in conveying
property.
RESERVES: 1) In a common interest subdivisions, an
accumulation of funds collected from owners for future replacement and major
maintenance of the common area and facilities. 2) With regard to mortgage
loans, an accumulation of funds, collected by the lender from the borrower as
part of each monthly mortgage payment, an amount allocated to pay property
taxes and insurance when they are due.
RESPA: (See Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act.)
RESTRICTION: A limitation on the use of
real property. Property restrictions fall into two general classifications‑public
and private. Zoning ordinances are examples of the former type. Restrictions
may be created by private owners, typically by appropriate clauses in deeds, or
in agreements, or in general plans of entire subdivisions. Usually they assume
the form of a covenant, or promise to do or not to do a certain thing.
RETROSPECTIVE
VALUE: The
value of the property as of a previous date.
RETURN: Profit from an investment; the yield.
REVERSION: The right to future
possession or enjoyment by a person, or the person's heirs, creating the
preceding estate. (For example, at the end of a lease.)
REVERSIONARY
INTEREST: The
interest which a person has in lands or other property, upon the termination of
the preceding estate. A future interest.
RIGHT OF
SURVIVORSHIP: The
right of a surviving tenant or tenants to succeed to the entire interest of the
deceased tenant; the distinguishing feature of a joint tenancy.
RIGHT OF WAY: A privilege operating as an
easement upon land, whereby the owner does by grant, or by agreement give to
another the right to pass over owner's land, to construct a roadway, or use as
a roadway, a specific part of the land; or the right to construct through and
over the land, telephone, telegraph, or electric power lines; or the right to
place underground water mains, gas mains, or sewer mains.
RIGHT, TITLE
AND INTEREST: A
term used in deeds to denote that the grantor is conveying all of that to which
grantor held claim.
RIPARIAN
RIGHTS: The
right of a landowner whose land borders on a stream or watercourse to use and
enjoy the water which is adjacent to or flows over the owners land provided
such use does not injure other riparian owners.
RISK ANALYSIS: A study made, usually by a lender, of the various
factors that might affect the repayment of a loan.
RISK RATING: A process used by the lender to decide on the
soundness of making a loan and to reduce all the various factors affecting the
repayment of the loan to a qualified rating of some kind.
SALE AND LEASEBACK: A financial arrangement where at the time
of sale the seller retains occupancy by concurrently agreeing to lease the
property from the purchaser. The seller receives cash while the buyer is
assured a tenant and a fixed return on buyer's investment.
SALE‑LEASEBACK‑BUY‑BACK: A sale and leaseback
transaction in which the leaseholder has the option to buy back the original
property after a specified period of time.
SALES CONTRACT: A contract by which buyer
and seller agree to terms of a sale.
SALVAGE VALUE: In computing depreciation for tax purposes the
reasonably anticipated fair market value of the property at the end of its
useful life and must be considered with all but the declining balance methods
of depreciation.
SANDWICH LEASE: A leasehold interest which lies between the
primary lease and the operating lease.
SASH: Wood or metal frames containing one or more window
panes.
SATISFACTION: Discharge of a mortgage or trust deed from the
records upon payment of the debt.
SATISFACTION PIECE: An instrument for recording
and acknowledging payment of an indebtedness secured by a mortgage.
SCRIBING: Fitting woodwork to an irregular surface.
SEAL: An impression made to attest the execution of an
instrument.
SECONDARY FINANCING: A loan secured by a second
mortgage or trust deed on real property. These can be third, fourth, fifth,
sixth mortgages or trust deeds, on and on ad infinitum.
SECTION: Section of land is established by government
survey, contains 640 acres and is one mile square.
SECURED PARTY: This is the party having the security
interest. Thus the mortgagee, the conditional seller, the pledgee, etc., are
all now referred to as the secured party. (Uniform Commercial Code.)
SECURITY AGREEMENT: An agreement between the secured party and
the debtor which creates the security interest. (Uniform Commercial Code.)
SECURITY INTEREST: A term designating the
interest of the creditor in the property of the debtor in all types of credit
transactions. It thus replaces such terms as the following: chattel mortgage;
pledge; trust receipt; chattel trust; equipment trust; conditional sale; inventory
lien; etc., according to Uniform Commercial Code usage.
SEISIN (SEIZIN): Possession of
real estate by one entitled thereto.
SELLER'S MARKET: The market condition which
exists when a seller is in a more commanding position as to price and terms
because demand exceeds supply.
SEPARATE PROPERTY: Property owned by a married person in his or her own right outside of
the community interest including property acquired by the spouse (I) before
marriage, (2) by gift or inheritance, (3) from rents and profits on separate
property, and (4) with the proceeds from other separate property.
SEPTIC TANK: An underground tank in
which sewage from the house is red by bacterial action and drained off.
SERVICING LOANS: Supervising and
administering a loan after it has been made. This involves such things as:
collecting the payments keeping accounting records, computing the interest and
principal, foreclosure of defaulted loans, and so on.
SET BACK ORDINANCE: An ordinance requiring
improvements built on property to be a specified distance from the property
line, street or curb.
SEVERALTY OWNERSHIP: Owned by one person only.
Sole ownership.
SHARED APPRECIATION MORTGAGE: A loan having a fixed rate
of interest set below the market rate for the term of the loan which also
provides for contingent interest to be paid to the lender on a certain
percentage of appreciation in the value of the property against which the loan
is secured upon transfer or sale of the property or the repayment of the loan.
SHERIFF'S DEED: Deed given by court order
in connection with sale of property to satisfy a judgment.
SIMPLE INTEREST: Interest computed on the
principal amount of a loan only as distinguished from compound interest.
SINKING FUND: Fund set aside from the
income from property which, with accrued interest, will eventually pay for
replacement of the improvements.
SIR: Society of Industrial
Realtors.
SLANDER OF TITLE: False and malicious
statements disparaging an owner's title to property and resulting in actual
pecuniary damage to the owner.
SPECIAL ASSESSMENT: 1) Legal charge against real estate by a
public authority to pay cost of public improvements such as: street lights,
sidewalks, street improvements. 2) In a common interest subdivision, a charge,
in addition to the regular assessment, levied by the association against owners
in the development, for unanticipated repairs or maintenance on the common area
or capital improvement of the common area.
SPECIAL POWER OF ATTORNEY: A written instrument
whereby a principal confers limited authority upon an agent to perform certain
prescribed acts on behalf of the principal. SPECIAL WARRANTY DEED: A deed in
which the grantor warrants or guarantees the title only against defects arising
during grantor's ownership of the property and not against defects existing
before the time of grantor's ownership.
SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE: An action to compel
performance of an agreement, e.g., sale of land as an alternative to damages or
rescission.
S.R.A.: Designates a person who is a member of the Society
of Real Estate Appraisers. SREA: Society of Real Estate Appraisers.
STANDARD DEPTH: Generally the most typical
lot depth in the neighborhood.
STANDBY COMMITMENT: The mortgage banker frequently protects a
builder by a "standby" agreement, under which banker agrees to make
mortgage loans at an agreed price for many months into the future. The builder
deposits a "standby fee" with the mortgage banker for this service.
Frequently, the mortgage broker protects self by securing a "standby"
from a long‑term investor for the same period of time, paying a fee for
this privilege. STATUTE OF FRAUDS: A state law, based on an old English statute
requiring certain contracts to be in writing and signed before they will be
enforceable at law, e.g., contracts for the sale of real property, contracts
not be performed within one year.
STATUTORY WARRANTY DEED: A short term warranty deed
which warrants by inference that the seller is the undisputed owner, has the
right to convey the property, and will defend the title if necessary. This type
of deed protects the purchaser in that the conveyor covenants to defend all
claims against the property. If conveyor fails to do so, the new owner can
defend said claims and sue the former owner.
STRAIGHT LINE
DEPRECIATION: A
method of depreciation under which improvements are depreciated at a constant
rate throughout the estimated useful life of the improvement.
STRAIGHT NOTE:
A note in
which a borrower repays the principal in a lump sum at maturity while interest
is paid in installments or at maturity. (See Interest Only Note.)
SUBAGENT: A person upon whom the powers of an agent have been
conferred, not by the principal, but by an agent as authorized by the agent's
principal.
SUBDIVISION: A legal definition of those
divisions of real property for the purpose of sale, lease or financing which
are regulated by law. For examples see: California Business and Professions
Code, Sections 11,000, 11,000.1, 11,000.5, 11,004.5, etc.; California
Government Code, Section 66424; United States Code, Title 15, Section 1402(3).
"SUBJECT TO" A
MORTGAGE:
When a grantee takes title to real property subject to a mortgage, grantee is
not responsible to the holder of the promissory note for the payment of any
portion of the amount due. The most that grantee can lose in the event of a
foreclosure is grantee's equity in the property. (See also "assumption of
mortgage.") In neither case is the original maker of the note released
from primary responsibility. If liability is to be assumed, the agreement must
so state.
SUBLEASE: A lease given by a lessee.
SUBORDINATE: To make subject to, or junior or inferior to.
SUBORDINATION AGREEMENT: An agreement by the holder
of an encumbrance against real property to permit that claim to take an
inferior position to other encumbrances against the property.
SUBPOENA: A legal order to cause a
witness to appear and give testimony.
SUBROGATION: Replacing one person with
another in regard to a legal right or obligation. The substitution of another
person in place of the creditor, to whose rights he or she succeeds in relation
to the debt. The doctrine is used very often where one person agrees to stand
surety for the performance of a contract by another person.
SUBSIDY BUYDOWN: Funds provided usually by
the builder or seller to temporarily reduce the borrower's monthly principal
and interest payment.
SUBSTITUTION, PRINCIPLE OF: Affirms that the maximum
value of a property tends to be set by the cost of acquiring an equally
desirable and valuable substitute property, assuming no costly delay is
encountered in making the substitution.
SUM OF THE YEARS DIGITS: An accelerated
depreciation method.
SUPPLY AND DEMAND, PRINCIPLE OF: In appraising, a valuation principle stating
that market value is affected by interaction of supply and demand forces in the
market as of the appraisal date.
SURETY: One who guarantees the
performance of another: Guarantor.
SURPLUS PRODUCTIVITY, PRINCIPLE OF: The net income that remains after the proper
costs of labor, organization and capital have been paid, which surplus is
imputable to the land and tends to fix the value thereof.
SURVEY: The process by which a
parcel of land is measured and its area is ascertained.
SYNDICATE: A partnership organized for
participation in a real estate venture. Partners ray be limited or unlimited in
their liability. (See real estate syndicate.)
TAKE‑OUT LOAN: The loan arranged by the
owner or builder developer for a buyer. The construction loan made for
construction of the improvements is usually paid in full from the proceeds of
this more permanent mortgage loan.
TAX: Enforced charge exacted of
persons, corporations and organizations by the government to be used to
support government services and programs.
TAX DEED: The deed given to a
purchaser at a public sale of land held for nonpayment of taxes. It conveys to
the purchaser only such title as the defaulting taxpayer had.
TAX‑FREE EXCHANGE: The trade or exchange of
one real property for another without the need to pay income taxes on the gain
at the time of trade.
TAX
SALE: Sale
of property after a period of nonpayment of taxes.
TENANCY IN COMMON: Co‑ownership of
property by two or more persons who hold undivided interest, without right of
survivorship; interests need not be equal.
TENANT: The party who has legal
possession and use of real property belonging to another.
TENANTS BY THE ENTIRETIES: Under certain state laws, ownership of property acquired
by a husband and wife during marriage, which property is jointly and equally
owned. Upon death of one spouse it becomes the property of the survivor.
TENTATIVE MAP: The Subdivision Map Act requires subdividers to submit initially a
tentative map of their tract to the local planning commission for study. The
approval or disapproval of the planning commission is noted on the map.
Thereafter, a final map of the tract embodying any changes requested by the
planning commission is required to be filed with the planning commission.
TENURE IN LAND: The mode or manner by
which an estate in lands is held. All rights and title rest with owner.
TERMITES: Ant‑like insects
which feed on wood and are highly destructive to wooden structures.
TERMITE SHIELD: A shield, usually of noncorrodible metal, placed on top of the foundation
wall or around pipes to prevent passage of termites.
TESTATOR: One who makes a will.
THIRD PARTY: Persons who are not parties
to a contract which affects an interest they have in the object of the
contract.
THRESHOLD: A strip of wood or metal
beveled on each edge and used above the finished floor under outside doors.
TIDELANDS: Lands that are covered and
uncovered by the ebb and flow of the tide.
TIME OF THE ESSENCE: A condition of a contract expressing the essential nature of
performance of the contract by a party in a specified period of time.
TIME‑SHARE
ESTATE: A
right of occupancy in a time‑share project (subdivision) which is coupled
with an estate in the real property.
TIME‑SHARE
PROJECT: A
form of subdivision of real property‑ into rights to the recurrent,
exclusive use or occupancy of a lot, parcel, unit, or segment of real property,
on an annual or some other periodic basis, for a specified period of time. (See
Subdivision.)
TIME‑SHARE
USE: A
license or contractual or membership right of occupancy in a timeshare project
which is not coupled with an estate in the real property.
TITLE: Indicates "fee"
position of lawful ownership and right to property. "Bundle of
Rights" possessed by an owner. Combination of all elements constituting
proof of ownership.
TITLE
INSURANCE: Insurance
to protect a real property owner or lender up to a specified amount against
certain types of loss, e.g., defective or unmarketable title.
TITLE REPORT: A report which discloses
condition of the title, made by a title company preliminary to issuance of
title insurance policy.
TITLE THEORY: Mortgage arrangement whereby
title to mortgaged real property vests in the lender. Some states give greater
protection to mortgage lenders and assume lenders have title interest.
Distinguished from Lien Theory States.
TOPOGRAPHY: Nature of the surface of
land; topography may be level, rolling, mountainous. Variation in earth's
surface.
TORRENS TITLE: System of title records provided by state law (no
longer used in California).
TORT: Any wrongful act (not involving
a breach of contract) for which a civil action will lie for the person wronged.
TOWNHOUSE: One of a row of houses usually of the same or
similar design with common side walls or with a very narrow space between
adjacent side walls.
TOWNSHIP: In the survey of public lands of the United
States, a territorial subdivision six miles long, six miles wide and containing
36 sections, each one mile square, located between two range lines and two
township lines.
TRADE FIXTURES: Articles of personal property annexed by a
business tenant to real property which are necessary to the carrying on of a
trade and are removable by the tenant.
TRADE‑IN: An increasingly popular method of
guaranteeing an owner a minimum amount of cash on sale of owner's present
property to permit owner to purchase another. If the property is not sold
within a specified time at the listed price, the broker agrees to arrange
financing to personally purchase the property at an agreed upon discount.
TRANSFER FEE: A charge made by a lending institution
holding or collecting on a real estate mortgage to change its records to
reflect a different ownership.
TRUST ACCOUNT: An account separate and apart and physically
segregated from broker's own funds, in which broker is required by law to
deposit all funds collected for clients.
TRUST DEED: Just as with a mortgage this is a legal document
by which a borrower pledges certain real property or collateral as guarantee
for the repayment of a loan. However, it differs from the mortgage in a number
of important respects. For example, instead of there being two parties to the
transaction there are three. There is the borrower who signs the trust deed and
who is called the trustor. There is the third, neutral party, to whom trustor
deeds the property as security for the payment of the debt, who is called the
trustee. And, finally, there is the lender who is called the beneficiary, the
one who benefits from the pledge agreement in that in the event of a default
the trustee can sell the property and transfer the money obtained at the sale
to lender as payment of the debt.
TRUSTEE: One who holds property in trust for another to
secure the performance of an obligation. Third party under a deed of trust.
TRUSTOR: One who borrows money from a
trust deed lender, then deeds the real property securing the loan to a trustee
to be held as security until trustor has performed the obligation to the lender
under terms of a deed of trust.
TRUTH IN LENDING: The name given to the
federal statutes and regulations (Regulation Z) which are designed primarily to
insure that prospective borrowers and purchasers on credit receive credit cost
information before entering into a transaction.
UNDERIMPROVEMENT: An improvement which,
because of its deficiency in size or cost, is not the highest and best use of
the site.
UNDERWRITING: Insuring something against
loss; guaranteeing financially.
UNDUE INFLUENCE: Use of a fiduciary or
confidential relationship to obtain a fraudulent or unfair advantage over
another's weakness of mind, or distress or necessity.
UNEARNED INCREMENT: An increase in value of
real estate due to no effort on the part of the owner; often due to increase in
population.
UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE: Establishes a unified and
comprehensive method for regulation of security transactions in personal
property, superseding the existing statutes on chattel mortgages, conditional
sales, trust receipts, assignment of accounts receivable and others in this
field.
UNIT‑IN‑PLACE
METHOD: The
cost of erecting a building by estimating the cost of each component part,
i.e., foundations, floors, walls, windows, ceilings, roofs, etc., (including
labor and overhead).
URBAN PROPERTY: City property; closely
settled property.
USURY: On a loan, claiming a rate
of interest greater than that permitted by law.
UTILITIES: Refers to services rendered by public utility
companies, such as: water, gas, electricity, telephone.
UTILITY: The ability to give
satisfaction and/or excite desire for possession. An element of value.
VACANCY FACTOR: The percentage of a
building's space that is unrented over a given
period.
VA~ ID: Having force, or binding force; legally sufficient and authorized by
law. VALLEY: The internal angle formed by the junction of two sloping sides of
a roof. VALUATION: Estimated worth or price. Estimation. The act of valuing by
appraisal. VA LOAN: A loan made to qualified veterans for the purchase of real
property wherein the Veteran's Administration guarantees the lender payment of
the mortgage. VALUE: Present worth of future benefits arising out of ownership
to typical users/ investors. VARIABLE INTEREST RATE: (VIRs or VMRs, Variable
Mortgage Rates.) An interest rate in a real estate loan which by the terms of
the note varies upward and downward over the term of the loan depending on
money market conditions.
VENDEE: A purchaser; buyer.
VENDOR: A seller; one who disposes a thing in
consideration of money.
VENEER: Thin sheets of wood.
VERIFICATION: Sworn statement before a
duly qualified officer to correctness of contents of an instrument.
VESTED: Bestowed upon someone; secured by someone, such as
title to property.
VOID: To have no force or effect;
that which is unenforceable.
VOIDABLE: That which is capable of
being adjudged void, but is not void unless action is taken to make it so.
VOLUNTARY LIEN: Any lien placed on property with consent of, or as a result of, the
voluntary act of the owner.
WAINSCOTING: Wood lining of an interior wall; lower section of a wall when finished
differently from the upper part.
WAIVE: To relinquish, or abandon;
to forego a right to enforce or require anything.
WARRANTY OF
AUTHORITY: A
representation by an agent to third persons that the agent has and is acting
within the scope of authority conferred by his or her principal.
WARRANTY DEED:
A deed used
to convey real property which contains warranties of title and quiet
possession, and the grantor thus agrees to defend the premises against the
lawful claims of third persons. It is commonly used in many states but in
others the grant deed has supplanted it due to the modern practice of securing
title insurance policies which have reduced the importance of express and
implied warranty in deeds.
WASTE: The destruction, or
material alteration of, or injury to premises by a tenant.
WATER TABLE: Distance from surface of
ground to a depth at which natural groundwater is found.
WEAR AND TEAR: Depreciation of an asset due
to ordinary usage.
WILL: A written, legal declaration
of a person expressing his or her desires for the disposition of that person's
property after his or her death.
WRAP AROUND
MORTAGE: A
financing device whereby a lender assumes payments on existing trust deeds of a
borrower and takes from the borrower a junior trust deed with a face value in
an amount equal to the amount outstanding on the old trust deeds and the
additional amount of money borrowed.
X: An individual who cannot write may execute a legal
document by affixing an "X" (his/her mark) where the signature
normally goes. Around the mark a witness then writes the person's name and
signs his or her own name as witness.
Her
Mark
(Signature)
Bill Gray, Witness
YARD: A unit of measurement 3 feet
long. YIELD: The interest earned by an investor on an investment (or by a bank
on the money it has loaned). Also, called return or profit.
YIELD RATE: The yield expressed as a
percentage of the total investment. Also, called Rate of Return.
ZONE:
The area
set off by the proper authorities for specific use; subject to certain restrictions
or restraints.
ZONING: Act of city or county
authorities specifying type of use to which property may be put in specific
areas.