Real Estate Definitions
Defintions for Real Estate Class
Terms
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- Deed of Trust
- Borrower conveys naked title to a trustee who holds it as security for the lender
- Unit-In-Place Method
- The appraisal method of estimated building costs by calculating the costs of all of the physical components in the structure, with the cost of each item including its proper installation, connection, etc; also called the segregated cost method.
- Fractional Section
- A parcel of land less than 160 acres, usually found at the edge of a rectangular survey
- Liability Coverage
- Insurance protecting property owner in case of damage to a person or another's property due to owner's negligence
- Accession
- Acquiring title to additions or improvements to real property as a result of the annexation of fixtures or the accretion of alluvial deposits along the banks of streams
- Fiduciary
- One in whom trust and confidence is placed; a reference to a broker employed under the terms of listing contract or buyer agency agreement
- Reproduction Cost
- Construction cost at current prices of an exact duplicate of the subject property; i.e., using slate shingles on the roof instead of equally effective fiberglass shingle
- Escrow
- Closing of transaction through third party called escrow agent; who receives funds and documents to be delivered upon performance of certain instructions
- Certificate of Reasonable Value (CRV)
- A form indicating the appraised value of a property being financed with a VA loan
- Deed in Lieu of Foreclosure
- Way for mortgagor to avoid foreclosure by returning deed to lender/mortgagee
- Radon
- Radioactive odorless, tasteless gas; with long term exposure may cause lung cancer
- Functional Obsolescence
- Loss of value to an improvement to real estate because of functional problem, often caused by changing tastes or poor design
- Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT)
- Trust ownership of real estate by a group of individuals who purchase certificates of ownership in the trust, which in turn invests the money in real property and distributes the profits back to the investors free of corporate income tax
- Certificate of Sale
- The document generally given to the purchaser at a tax foreclosure sale. A Certificate of Sale does not convey title; normally it is an instrument certifying that the holder received title to the property after the redemption period passed and that the holder paid the property taxes for that interim period.
- Riparian Rights
- Owner's rights in land that borders on or includes a stream, river or lake. Rights include access to and use of the water
- Familial Status
- In fair housing, at least one person over the age of 18 having legal custody of one person under 18, includes pregnant women and foster children
- Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
- An independent federal agency that insures the deposits in commercial banks
- Title Insurance
- Policy insuring the owner or mortgagee against loss by reason of defects in the title of a parcel of real estate
- Alienation
- The act of transferring property to another. Alienation may be voluntary, such as by6 gift or sale, or involuntary, as through eminent domain or adverse possession
- Usury
- Charging interest in excess of the maximum rate; often residential first mortgage loans are exempt from such laws
- Estate at Will
- Term is indefinite; i.e., "I will rent to you until I sell the house," will be terminated by death of either party or sale of property
- Estate from Period to Period
- Leasehold interest that automatically renews until either party gives notice to change the terms; month to month; not terminated by death of either party, nor sale of property
- Benchmark
- Permanent reference mark of point established for use by surveyors in measuring differences in elevation
- Discount Point
- Unit of measurement used for various loan charges; one point equals one percent of the loan amount
- Due On Sale Clause
- A provision in the mortgage that states that the entire balance of the note is immediately due and payable if the mortgagor transfers (sells) the property
- Chain of Title
- Succession of conveyances from some accepted starting point, whereby the present hold of title derives the title, there should be no "breaks" in the succession
- Discount Point
- A unit of measurement used for various loan charges; one point equals 1 percent of the amount of the loan
- Survey
- The process by which boundaries are measured and land areas are determined; the on-site measurement of lot lines, dimensions, and position of a house on a lot, including the determination of any existing encroachments or easements.
- Private Mortgage Insurance
- PMI; insurance provided by private carrier that protects a lender against loss if a foreclosure and deficiency; usually insures top 10 - 20 percent of the loan
- Conformity
- Appraisal principle that holds that the greater the similarity among properties in an area, the better they will hold their value
- Uniform Electronic Transaction Act (UETA)
- Sets forth rules for entering into an enforceable contract using electronic means.
- Implied Agency
- Based on the actions of the parties that imply that they have mutually consented to an agency relationship, an implied agency relationship is formed
- Will
- Written document, properly witnessed, providing for transfer of title to property owned by the deceased, called the testator
- Bundle of Legal Rights
- Ownership of all legal rights: control, possession, use, disposition, enjoyment
- Power of Attorney
- A written instrument authorizing a person, the attorney-in-fact, to act as agent for another person to the extent indicated in the instrument
- Statutory Right of Redemption
- The right of a defaulted property owner to recover the property after its sale by paying the appropriate fees and charges.
- Conventional Loan
- Loan that is neither FHA nor VA; does not require insurance or guarantee, although today high LTV loans are made along with PMI (private mortgage insurance
- Intermediate Theory
- Adopted by a number of states, a theory based on the principles of title theory but requires the mortgagee foreclose to obtain legal title.
- Stigmatized Property
- Property branded as undesirable because of an event that happened there, such as murder, suicide, drug dealing
- Rules and Regulation
- Licensing authority to provide for administering the law and set operating guidelines for licensees. Have the same force and effect as any law.
- Judgment Lien
- After judgment entered and recorded with county recorder, becomes a general lien on defendant's real and personal property
- Risk management
- Perils of any risk evaluated in terms of options: avoid, control, transfer or retain (ACTOR); often involves buying insurance to transfer risk to third party
- Automatic Extension
- A listing agreement clause stating that the agreement will continue automatically for a certain period of time after its expiration date. In many state this clause is discouraged or prohibited
- Community Reinvestment Act of 1977 (CRA)
- Under the act, financial institutions are expected to meet the deposit and credit needs of their communities; participate and invest in local community develo0pment and rehabilitation projects; and participate in loan programs for housing, small business and small farms.
- Torrens System
- A method of evidencing title by registration with the proper public authority, generally called the registrar, named for its founder, Sir Robert Torrens.
- Property Manager
- Property manager (agent) is hired by the owner (principal) to maintain owner's investment and ensure that the property produces income
- Datum
- Horizontal plane from which heights and depths are measured
- Will
- A written document, properly witnessed, providing for the transfer of title to property owned by the decease, called the testator.
- Reverse Annuity Mortgage (RAM)
- RAM; homeowner receives monthly payments based on accumulated equity rather than one lump sum; repaid at certain date or owner's death or sale of property
- Severance
- Changing of real to personal property, such as cutting down a tree, removing stained glass window,
- Multiperil Policy
- Insurance package for apartment, commercial buildings; standard fire, hazard, public liability and casualty, require special coverage for earthquakes and floods
- Exclusive-Right-To-Sell Listing Agreement
- One agent (broker) is hired; broker receives a commission regardless of who finds the buyer for the property
- Fannie Mae
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- Uniform Settlement Statement (HUD-1)
- Form required by RESPA includes all charges that will be collected at closing, whether required by the lender or a third party; must be available day before closing
- Escheat
- The reversion of property to the state or county, as provide by state law, in cases where a decedent dies intestate without heirs capable of inheriting , or when the property is abandoned
- Life Cycle Costing
- Initial and operating costs of equipment over its expected life must be measured to compare total cost of one type of equipment with that of another
- Legal Life Estates (3)
- Curtesy (husband's rights), dower (wife's interest, homestead (protect family home from certain creditors)
- Lien Theory
- Some states interpret a mortgage as being purely a lien on real property. The mortgagee thus has not right of possession but must foreclose the lien and sell the property if the mortgagor defaults.
- Contingency
- A provision in a contract that requires a certain act to be done or a certain event to occur before the contract becomes binding
- Inheritance Taxes
- State imposed taxes on a decedent's real and personal property
- Avulsion
- The sudden tearing away of land, as by earthquake, flood, volcanic action, or the sudden change in the course of a stream
- Index Method
- The appraisal method of estimating building costs by multiplying the original cost of the property by a percentage factor to adjust for current construction costs
- Interest
- Charge made by lender for use of money; a charge to "rent" the money
- Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
- Governmental department that has established rules and regulations that further interpret the practices affected by the law. In addition, HUD distributes an equal housing opportunity poster.
- Mechanic's Lien
- Statutory lien in the property where contractors or materialmen have labor or materials in a given property
- Deficiency Judgment
- Personal judgment levied against the borrower when a foreclosure sale does not produce sufficient funds to pay fully the mortgage debt
- Equitable Title
- The interest held by a vendee under a contract for deed or an installment contract; the equitable right to obtain absolute ownership to property when legal title is held in another's name
- Competition
- The appraisal principle that state that excess profits generate competition
- Capitalization Rate
- The rate of return a property will product on the owner's investment
- Lease
- A written or oral contract between a landlord (the lessor) and a tenant (the lessee) that transfers the right to exclusive possession and use of the landlord's real property to the lessee for a specified period of time and for a stated consideration (rent). By state low leases for longer than a certain period of time (generally one year) must be in writing to be enforceable.
- Codicil
- A supplement or an addition to a will, executed with the same formalities as a will, that normally does not revoke the entire will
- National Flood Insurance Act
- Requires flood insurance when financing with federally related loans on properties located in flood-prone areas
- Mill
- One-tenth of one cent used in some states to compute real estate taxes; i.e., 52 mills = $0.052 tax for each dollar of assessed valuation of a property
- Participation
- A mortgage loan wherein the lender has a partial equity interest in the property or receives a portion of the income from the property
- Probate
- Legal process by which a court determines who will inherit a deceased person's property and what the assets of the estate are
- Title VIII of the Civil Rights Act of 1968
- Prohibits discrimination in the sale or rental of housing based on race, color, religion, national origin, sex, familial status, and handicap
- Ranges
- Strip of land six mile wide in rectangular survey system of land description, going north and south and numbered according to its distance from the principal meridian
- Brownfields Legislation
- Provides federal funding to states and localities to clean up brownfields sites.
- Subletting
- A written agreement between holders of liens on a property that changes the priority of mortgage, judgment, and other liens under certain circumstances.
- Commission
- Payment to broker for services rendered. In the sale of real property, often a percentage of the selling price.
- License
- (1) A privilege or right granted to a person by a state to operate as a real estate broker or salesperson. (2) The revocable permission for a temporary use of land - a personal right that cannot be sold.
- Qualifying Broker
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- Quantity Survey Method
- The appraisal method of estimated building cost by calculating the cost of all of the physical components in the improvements, adding the cost to assemble them and then including the indirect costs associated with such construction
- Regression
- An appraisal principle that states that, between dissimilar properties, the value of the better quality property is affected adversely by the presence of the lower quality property
- Right of Survivorship
- When a joint tenant dies, his or her interest passes to the remaining owners of the property; becomes an issue only at death of one of the owners
- Habendum Clause
- "To have and to hold" clause in a deed defining the extent of ownership bing granted; i.e., a life estate or a defeasible fee
- Coinsurance Clause
- Requires policyholder to maintain fire insurance, coverage equal to at least 80% of property's actual replacement value
- Novation
- Substituting a new obligation for an old one or substituting new parties to an existing obligation
- Title Search
- The examination of public records relating to real estate to determine the current state of the ownership.
- Constructive Notice
- Notice given to the world by recorded documents; possession of property may also be considered constructive notice
- Legally Competent Parties
- People who are recognized by law as being able to contract with others; those of legal age and sound mind
- Suit to Quiet Title
- Court action intended to establish or settle the title to a particular property, especially when there is a cloud on the title
- Separate Property
- Under community property law, property owned solely by either spouse before the marriage, acquired by gift, or inheritance after the marriage, or purchased with separate funds after the marriage.
- Groundwater
- Water that exists under earth's surface in tiny spaces or crevices in geological formations; if contaminated, threatens source of clean drinking water
- Parol Evidence Rule
- A rule of evidence providing that a written agreement is the final expression of the agreement of the parties, not to be varied or contradicted by prior or contemporaneous oral or written negotiations
- Code of Ethics
- Written system or moral standards for ethical behavior that often goes goes beyond the letter of the law
- lis pendens
- Recorded legal document giving constructive notice that the property is the subject of an action filed in a state or federal court
- Exclusive-Agency Listing Agreement
- One agent (broker) is hired; broker receives a commission only if he or she is the procuring cause; seller retains right to sell without obligation to pay commission
- Farm Service Agency (FSA)
- An agency of the federal government that provides credit assistance to farmers and other individuals who live in rural areas
- Substitution
- An appraisal principle that states that the maximum value of a property tends to be set by the cost of purchasing an equally desirable and valuable substitute property, assuming that no costly delay is encountered in making the substitution.
- Graduated Payment Mortgage (GPM)
- A loan in which the monthly principal and interest payments increase by a certain percentage each year for a certain number of years and then levels off for the remaining loan term
- Town House
- A type of residential dwelling with tow floors that is connected to one or more dwellings by a common wall(s). Title to the unit and lot vest in the owner who shares a fractional interest with other owners for the common areas.
- Trustor
- A borrower in a deed of trust loan transaction; one who places property in a trust. Also called a grantor or settler.
- Estoppel
- Method of creating an agency relationship in which someone states incorrectly that another person is his or her agent and a third person relies on that representation
- Base Line
- Imaginary line running east and west used by surveyors as a reference in describing land under the rectangular survey system
- Alienation Clause
- Also know as "due on sale" clause permits lender to declare balance of loan immediately due if property is sold; prevents loan assumption without lender approval
- Net Listing
- Broker entitled to any amount above the seller's stated net; often illegal; potential conflict of interest between broker's interest and seller's interest
- Void vs. Voidable
- Void has no legal force because it is lacking an essential part of a contract; voidable is one in which either or both parties may reject or disaffirm (contingencies)
- Gross Income Multiplier
- A figure used as a multiplier of the gross annual income of a property to produce an estimate of the property's value
- Escrow Account
- The trust account established by a broker under the provisions of the license law for the purpose of holding funds on behalf of the broker's principal or some other person until the consummation or termination of a transaction
- Corporation
- An artificial entity created by operation of law whose rights in business are similar to those of an individual. Continuous existence until it is legally dissolved
- Equity
- The interest an owner has in a property over and above any outstanding loans (Market Value - Loans = Equity)
- Adjustable Rate Mortgage (ARM)
- Loan that has a fluctuating interest rate, usually one tied to a cost-of-funds index; the cost of doing business is the margin that stays fixed and is added to the base rate
- Tenancy in Common
- Form of co-ownership in which each owner holds an undivided interest as if he or where were sole owners; individual owners have right to partition, right of inheritance
- Co-Ownership
- Title ownership held by two or more persons
- Usury
- Charging interest at a higher rate than the maximum rate established by state law.
- Easement by Condemnation
- An easement created by the government of government agency that has exercised the right under eminent domain
- Errors and Omissions Insurance
- Liability insurance to cover broker for errors and negligence in general business; usually does not cover civil rights or antitrust violations
- Holographic Will
- A will that is written, date, and signed in the testator's handwriting
- Descent
- Acquisition of an estate by inheritance in which an heir succeeds to the property by operation of law
- Employee
- Works for employer is responsible for withholding income taxes and FICA
- 4 Unities of Joint Tenancy
- PITT: Possession, Interest, Time and Title. All four must exist simultaneously for joint tenancy to exist
- Installment Contract
- Also know as land contract, contract for deed, selling under contract. Purchaser receives possession but not legal title until all payments have been made
- Subagent
- Agent working for an agent; in real estate, the salesperson is the broker's agent and the subagent to the seller (or buyer) Note - Not permitted in some states
- Emblements
- Annual, harvestable crops such as corn, wheat; personal property
- Nonagent
- An intermediary between a buyer and seller, or landlord and tenant, who assists one or both parties with a transaction without representing either. Also known as a facilitator, transaction broker, transaction coordinator and contract broker.
- Conveyance
- A term used to refer to any document that transfers title to real property. The term is also used in describing the act of transferring
- Negotiable Instrument
- A written promise or order to pay a specific sum of money that may be transferred by endorsement or delivery. The transferee then has the original payee's right to payment.
- Satisfaction Piece
- Document acknowledging that the debts have been repaid
- Inquiry Notice
- Notice the law presumes a reasonable person would obtain by inquiring into a property
- Nondisturbance Clause
- A mortgage clause that states the mortgagee agrees not to terminate the tenancies of the lessees in the event the mortgagee forecloses on the mortgagor-lessor's building.
- Exchange
- A transaction in which all or part of the consideration is the transfer of like-kind property (such as real estate for real estate)
- Cloud on Title
- Any document, claim, unreleased lien, or encumbrance that may impair the title to real property or make the title doubtful; usually revealed by a title search and removed by either a quitclaim deed or suit to quiet title
- Broker
- One who acts as an intermediary on behalf of others for a fee or commission
- Percentage Lease
- Common lease for retail property; often a base monthly rent plus a percentage of any gross sales over that amount
- Economics Characteristics of Real Estate (4)
- Scarcity, improvements, permanence of investment, area preference (location)
- Group boycotts
- Illegal antitrust activity. Two or more businesses conspire against another business or agree not to work with another company in order to reduce competition
- Loan to Value Ratio
- Relationship between amount of mortgage loan and value of the real estate being pledged as collateral
- Option
- Agreement to keep open for a set period an offer to sell or purchase property; usually a unilateral contract; one party must perform if the other so decides
- Common Elements
- Parts of a property that are necessary or convenient to the existence, maintenance, and safety of a condominium or are normally in common use by all of the condominium residents. Each condominium owner has an undivided ownership interest in the common elements
- Periodic Estate (Tenancy)
- See Estate from Period to Period
- Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA)
- Federal law that prohibits discrimination in the extension of credit because of race, color, religion, national origin, sex, receipt of public assistance, age, marital status
- Mortgagee
- A lender in a mortgage loan transaction
- Civil Rights Act of 1866
- Act that prohibits any racial discrimination in the sale or rental of housing
- Land Contract
- See installment contract
- National Association of Real Estate Brokers (NAREB)
- Dedicated to equal housing opportunity, members are REALISTS
- Allodial System
- A system of land ownership in which land is held free and clear or any rent or service due to the government; commonly contrasted to the feudal system is held under the allodial system in the United States
- Market Data Approach
- (also known as the sales comparison approach) An estimate of value obtained by comparing property being appraised with recently sold comparable properties
- Square-Foot Method
- Appraisal method of estimating building cost; multiplying number of square feet in the improvement by cost per square foot of recently constructed similar properties
- Lien
- Monetary interest in real property; example are mortgage liens, mechanics liens
- Evidence of Title
- Proof of ownership of property; commonly a certificate of title, an abstract of title with lawyer's opinion, title insurance, or a Torrens registration certificate
- Sales - Leaseback
- Transaction in which owner sells improved property and as part of transaction, signs a long term lease to remain in possession of premises; permits owner to "pull out" equity
- Equity Buildup
- That portion of the loan payment directed toward the principal rather than the interest, plus any gain in property value due to appreciation
- Vendor's Lien
- A lien that belongs to a vendor for the unpaid purchase price of land, where the vendor has not taken any other lien or security beyond the personal obligation of the purchaser.
- Suit for Possession
- A court suit initiated by a landlord to evict a tenant from leased premises after the tenant has breached one of the terms of the lease or has held possession of the property after the lease's expiration
- Tenancy by the Entirety
- The joint ownership, recognized in some states, of property acquired by husband and wife during marriage. Upon the death of one spouse the survivor becomes the owner of the property.
- Tax Lien
- A charge against property created by operation of law. Tax liens and assessments take priority over all other liens.
- Specific Lien
- Lien affecting or attaching only to a certain, specific parcel of land
- Clustering
- Grouping of home sites within a subdivision on smaller lots than normal with the remaining land used as common areas
- Future Interest
- A person's present right to an interest in real property that will not result in possession or enjoyment until some time in the future, such as a reversion or right of re-entry
- Condemnation
- A judicial or administrative proceeding to exercise the power of eminent domain, through which a government agency takes private property for public use and compensates the owner
- Valid Contract
- A contract that complies with all the essentials of a contract and is binding and enforceable on all parties to it.
- Real Estate License Law
- State law enacted to protect the public from fraud, dishonesty and incompetence in the purchase and sale of real estate
- Interstate Land Sales Full Disclosure Act
- Federal law that regulates the sale of certain real estate in interstate commerce
- Fee Simple Determinable
- A fee simple estate qualified by a special limitation. Language used to describe limitation includes the words, "so long as" or "while" or "during."
- Economic Life
- Number of years during which an improvement will add value to the land
- Duress
- Unlawful constraint or action exercised upon a person whereby the person is forced to perform an act against his or her will. A contract entered into under duress is voidable
- Internet Listing Display Policy
- A policy from the National Association of REALTORS ยฎ that allows all MLS members to have equal right to display MLS data, and respects the rights of property owners and their listing brokers to market a property as they wish.
- Inactive License
- 34-27-35 (g) The commission shall prescribe a license renewal form, which shall accompany renewal fees which shall be filed on or before August 31 of the final year of each license period in order for the respective license to be renewed on a timely basis for the following license period. If any of the foregoing are filed during the period from September 1 through September 30 of the final year of a license period, the one hundred fifty dollar ($150) penalty set out below shall be paid in addition to the renewal fees. Failure to meet this September 30 deadline shall result in the license being placed on inactive status on the following October 1, and the license shall be subject to all reactivation requirements. Reactivations shall be processed in the order received as evidenced by postmark or delivery date. Certified or registered mail may be used for reactivation in these cases. Licensees filing during the period from September 1 of the final year of a license period through September 30 of the initial year of a license period shall pay the required license fee, plus a penalty of one hundred fifty dollars ($150).
- Vendor
- A sellor, usually under the terms of a land contract.
- Acceleration Clause
- Clause in mortgage or deed of trust that can be enforced to make the entire debt payable immediately if borrower defaults
- Redemption Period
- Time frame in which property owners in some states have the right to redeem their real estate by paying the sales price, interest and costs
- Liquidated Damages
- Amount predetermined by parties to contract as total compensation due injured party should the other party breach the contract
- Assignment
- In a lease, transferring all of one's remaining interest in the property, although the original lessee is till responsible for the financial obligations
- Correction Lines
- Provisions in the rectangular survey system made to compensate for the curvature of the earth' surface. Every fourth township line (at 24 mile intervals) is used as a correction line on which the intervals between the north and south range lines are remeasured and correct to a full six mile
- Conditional Use Permit
- Written governmental permission allowing a use inconsistent with zoning buy necessary for the common good, such as locating an emergency medical facility in a predominately residential area
- Curtesy
- A life estate, usually a fractional interest, given by some states to the surviving husband in real estate owned by his deceased wife. Most states have abolished Curtesy
- Retroactive Liability
- Liability is not limited to the current owner, but includes people who have owned the site in the past.
- Single Agent
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- Lease Purchase
- The purchase of real property, the consummation of which is preceded by a lease, usually long term that is typically done for tax or financing purposes.
- Secondary Mortgage Market
- Market for purchase and sale of existing mortgages; designed to provide greater liquidity for mortgages; generally does not deal directly with borrowers
- Proration
- Expenses, either prepaid or paid in arrears, that are divided or distributed between buyer and seller at closing
- Tax Deed
- An instrument, similar to a certificate of sale, given to a purchaser at a tax sale. See also Certificate of Sale.
- Bargain and Sale Deed
- A deed that carries with it no warranties against liens or other encumbrances but that does imply that the grantor has the right to convey title. The grantor may add warranties to the deed at his or her discretion
- General Lien
- The right of a creditor to have all of a debtor's property - both real and personal - sold to satisfy a debt
- Net Operating Income (NOI)
- The income projected for an income producing property after deducting losses for vacancy and collection and operating expenses
- Prepayment Penalty
- A charge imposed on a borrower who pays off the loan principal early. This penalty compensates the lender for interest and other charges that would otherwise be lost
- Servient Tenement
- Land on which an easement exists in favor of an adjacent property (called a dominant estate): also called a servient estate.
- Statute of Frauds
- State law requires certain instruments, such as deeds, real estate sales contracts and certain leases, to be in writing to be legally enforceable
- Trust
- Fiduciary arrangement whereby the owner (trustor) conveys property to a third party, (trustee), to be held and administered on behalf of another person (beneficiary)
- Pyramiding
- The process of acquiring additional property by refinancing properties already owned and investing the loan proceeds in additional properties
- Cash Flow
- The net spendable income from an investment, determined by deducting all operating and fixed expenses from the gross income. When expenses exceed incomer, a negative cash flow results
- Executory Contract
- A contract which something remains to be done by one or more of the parties
- Condominiums
- Ownership of the airspace of a unit, plus undivided interest in common elements
- Protected Classes
- Any group of people designated by HUD in consideration of federal and state law; currently includes ethnic minorities, women, religious groups, handicapped and others
- Trustee
- One to whom something is entrusted, and holds legal title to property and administers the property for the benefit of a beneficiary. Or a member of a board entrusted with the administration of an institution or organization, such as a cooperative.
- Employment Contract
- A document evidencing formal employment between employer and employee or between principal and agent. In the real estate business this generally takes the form of a listing agreement or management agreement
- Credit
- On a closing statement, an amount entered in a person;s favor - either an amount the party has paid or an amount for which the party must be reimbursed
- Encroachment
- A building or some portion of it - a wall or fence for instance - that extends beyond the land of the owner and illegally intrudes on some land of an adjoining owner or a street or alley
- Abstract of Title
- Certification by abstractor that condensed history of title to a particular parcel of real estate, including, conveyances and encumbrances, is correct
- Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA)
- Prohibits discrimination in lending based on race, color, religion, national origin, sex, receipt of public assistance, age and marital status
- Trust Deed Lien
- A lien on the property of a trustor that secures a deed of trust loan.
- Leasehold Estate
- A tenant's right to occupy real estate during the term of a lease, generally consider to be a personal property interest.
- Hypothecation
- To pledge property as security for loan obligation without giving up possession of it; opposite of practice in a pawn shop
- Redemption
- The right of a defaulted property owner to recover his or her property by curing the default
- Indemnification
- In a listing, a clause that states that the seller and broker will not sue each other for any incorrect information supplied by one to the other
- Encumbrance Claim
- Charge or liability that attaches to real estate liens, restrictions, easements, encroachments
- Acre
- A measure of land equal to 43,560 square feet, 4,840 square yards, 4,047 square meters, 160 square rods or 0.4047 hectares
- Income approach
- The process of estimated the value of an income producing property through capitalization of the annual net income expected to be produced by the property during its remaining useful life
- Parol Evidence
- Oral or verbal evidence
- Security Deposit
- A payment by a tenant, held by the landlord during the lease term, and kept (wholly or partially) on default, or on destruction of the premises by the tenant.
- Landfill
- An enormous hole to store hazardous materials, lined to prevent leakage of waste materials; includes underground drainage pipes to monitor for leaks and leaching
- Independent Contractor
- Person hired to perform a certain act, only end result is under control and direction of another. Most real estate licensees are treated as independent contractors
- Time Sharing
- Form of ownership that allows use of the property for a fixed or variable time frame, often used in resorts
- Trust Deed
- An instrument used to create a mortgage lien by which the borrower conveys title to a trustee, who holds it as security for the benefits of the note holder (the lender); also called a deed of trust.
- Real Property
- Interests, benefits, and rights associated with real estate ownership
- Section
- A portion of township under the rectangular (government) survey system. A township is divided into 36 sections, numbered 1 through 36. A section is a square with mile long sides and an area of one square mile or 640 acres.
- Boot
- Money or property given to make up any difference in value or equity between two properties in an exchange
- Gross Lease
- Tenant pays rents, landlord pays all expenses of property; most common form of residential lease
- Vendee
- A buyer, usually under the terms of a land contract.
- Freehold Estate
- An estate in land in which ownership is for an indeterminate length, in contrast to a leasehold estate.
- Kickbacks
- Prohibited unearned fees when no service has been rendered; i.e., receiving fees for making referrals to lenders, attorneys, surveyors, appraisers, etc
- Fee for Service
- Arrangement where a consumer asks a licensee to perform specific real estate services for a set fee
- Common Law
- The body of law based on custom usage and court decisions
- Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
- Protects rights of disabled individuals in employment and public accommodation; requires reasonable accommodation that enable disabled persons to work with dignity
- American Land Title Association (ALTA) Policy
- A title insurance policy that protects the interest in a collateral property of a mortgage lender who originates a new real estate loan
- Assignment
- Transfer in writing of interest in a bond, mortgage, lease
- Community Association Management
- Provides a team of property manager, accounting staff, office staff and property consultants to manage property
- Property Management
- Management of another's property for compensation
- Federal National Mortgage Association
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- Junior Lien
- An obligation, such as a second mortgage, that is subordinate in rights or lien priority to an existing lien on the same realty
- Prepaid Item
- On closing statement, items that have been paid by the seller, such as real estate taxes, for which he or she must be reimbursed by the buyer (credit seller, debit buyer)
- Eminent Domain
- The right of a government or municipal quasi-public body to acquire property for public use through a court action called a condemnation, in which the court decides that the use is a public use and determines the compensation to be paid to the owner
- Net Lease
- Lease requiring tenant to pay not only rent but also taxes, insurance, utilities and repairs
- Adverse Possession
- Possession of another's land as if the owner for a statutory period which may lead to acquiring title
- Statutory Lien
- A lien imposed on property by statute - a tax lien, for example - in contrast to an equitable lien, which arises out of common law.
- Freddie Mac
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- License Laws
- State laws enacted to protect the public by ensuring a standard of competence and professionalism in the real estate industry
- Encumbrance
- Anything - such as a mortgage, tax or judgment lien, an easement, a restriction on the use of the land, or an outstanding dower right -that may diminish the value or use and enjoyment of a property
- Township Tiers
- Township lines that form strips of land and are designated by consecutive numbers north or south of the base line.
- Setback
- The amount of space local zoning regulations require between a lot line and a building line.
- Special Agent
- Agent hired by principal to perform a single act. In real estate, broker is special agent hired by seller to find ready, willing, able buyer
- Latent Defect
- Hidden structural defect that would not be discovered by ordinary inspection
- Community Property
- System of ownership; each spouse has an equal interest in property acquired during marriage: separate property is that acquired before marriage
- Informed Consent
- 34-27-81 (9) A consumer's agreement to allow something to happen which is based upon full disclosure of facts needed to choose appropriate brokerage services.
- Reversionary Right
- The remnant of an estate that the grantor holds after granting a life estate to another person.
- Rate Cap
- The limit on the amount the interest rate can be increased at each adjustment period in an adjustable rate loan. The cap may also set the maximum interest rate that can be charged during the life of the loan.
- Gap
- A defect in the chain of tile of a particular parcel of real estate; a missing document or conveyance that raises doubt as to the present ownership of the land
- Homeowner's Insurance Policy
- A standardized package insurance policy that covers a residential real estate owner against financial loss from fire, theft, public liability and other common risks
- Taxation
- The process by which a government of municipal quasi-public body raises monies to fund its operation.
- Real Estate Recovery Fund
- A fund established in some states from real estate license revenues to cover claims of aggrieved parties who have suffered monetary damage thought the actions of a real estate license.
- Easement
- A right to use the land of another for a specific purpose, such as for a right of way or utilities; an incorporeal interest in land
- Rectangular Survey System
- System for surveying and describing land by reference to principal meridians and base lines; also called government survey system
- Management Agreement
- A contract between the owner of income property and a management firm or individual property manager that outlines the scope of the manager's authority
- Testator
- A person who has made a valid will. A woman often is referred to as a testatrix, although testator can be used for either gender.
- Local improvement District (LID)
- An assessment (i.e., tax) on a local improvement district for a public improvement project the district has approved
- General Warranty Deed
- A deed in which the grantor fully warrants good clear title to the premises. Used in most real estate deed transfers, a general warranty deed offers the greatest protection of any deed
- Title Theory
- Some states interpret a mortgage to mean the lender is the owner of mortgaged land. Upon full payment of the mortgage debt, the borrower becomes the landowner.
- Granting Clause
- Words in deed on conveyance that state the grantor's intention to convey the property at the present time. This clause is generally worded as "convey and warrant"; "grant"; "grant, bargain, and sell"; or the like
- Lead
- Metal in body can cause serious damage to brain, kidneys, nervous system; used extensively in paint; must be discussed when selling a house built before 1978
- Contract Broker
- 34-27-81 (17) A licensee who assists one or more parties in a contemplated real estate transaction without being an agent or fiduciary or advocate for the interest of that party to a transaction.
- Appurtenant Easement
- Easement that is attached to and travels with the ownership of one parcel allowing the owner the use of the use of the neighbor's land
- Judgment
- The formal decision of a court upon the respective rights and claims of the parties to an action or suit. After a judgment has been entered and recorded with the county recorder, it usually becomes a general lien on the property of the defendant.
- Tenant's Insurance
- Insurance coverage that protects the personal belongings of tenants.
- Multiperil Policies
- Insurance policies that offer protection from a range of potential perils, such as those of a fire, hazard, public liability and casualty
- Deed
- Written document that, when executed and delivered, conveys title to or an interest in real estate
- Shared Appreciation Mortgage (SAM)
- A mortgage loan in which the lender, in exchange for a loan with a favorable interest rate, participates in the profits (if any) the borrower receives when the property is eventually sold.
- Buyer's Broker
- A residential real estate broker who represents prospective buyers exclusively. As the buyer's agent, the broker owes the the buyer-principal the common law or statutory agency duties.
- Attorney's Opinion of Title
- Statement that attorney has certified an abstract to be an accurate statement of the fact concerning the property ownership
- Subdivision
- Spilitting a single property into smaller parcels
- Encapsulation
- Sealing off of disintegrating asbestos or chipping and peeling lead based paint; may be preferable to removal; still leaves hazard behind
- Lien
- Right given by law to certain creditors to have their debts paid out of the property of a defaulting debtor, usually by court sale
- Commingling
- The illegal act by a real estate broker of placing client or customer funds with personal funds. By law brokers are required to maintain a separate trust or escrow account for other parties funds held temporarily by the broker
- Legacy
- A disposition of money or personal property by will
- Assessment
- The imposition of a tax, charge, or levy, usually according to established rates
- Right-of-Way
- The right given by one landowner to another to pass over the land, construct a roadway or use as a pathway, without actually transferring ownership.
- Market Value
- Most probable price a property would bring in an arm's length transaction under normal market conditions on the open market; market price is what is actually paid
- Fiscal Policy
- The government's policy in regard to taxation and spending programs. The balance between these two areas determines the amount of money the government will withdraw from or feed into the economy, which can counter economic peaks and slumps
- Inverse Condemnation
- An action brought by a property owner seeking just compensation for land taken for public use when the taker of the property does not intend to bring eminent domain proceedings. Property is condemned because its use and value have been diminished due to an adjacent property's public use.
- Mortgage Banker
- Mortgage loan companies that originate, service and sell loans to investors
- Estate in Land
- The degree, quantity, nature, and extent of interest a person has in real property
- Deed Restriction
- Clause in deed limiting future use of property; may limit density of buildings, dictate types of structures or even prevent buildings from being used for a specific purpose
- Ratification
- Method of creating an agency relationship in which the principal accepts the conduct of someone who acted without prior authorization as the principals agent
- Agent
- Person who is hired to act for another. Hired by the principal
- Offer and Acceptance
- Two essential components of a valid contract; a "meeting of the minds"
- Farm Credit
- A federal agency of the Department of Agricultural that offers programs to help families purchase or operate family farms
- Anticipation
- Appraisal principle that holds that value can increase or decrease based on the expectation that some future event may or may not occur
- Lease Purchase
- Purchase of real property after a period of a lease, usually long term; usually done for tax or financing purposes
- Ostensible Agency
- A form of implied agency relationship created by the actions of the parties involved rather than by written agreement or document
- Mortgagor
- A borrower in a mortgage loan transaction
- Legal Description
- A description of a specific parcel of real estate complete enough for an independent surveyor to locate and identify
- VA Loan
- Mortgage to qualified veteran by authorized lender; guaranteed by Department of Veteran Affairs; up to 100% LTV based on certificate of reasonable value (CRV)
- Regulation Z
- Implements Truth in Lending Act requiring credit institutions to inform borrowers of true cost of obtaining a load (APR); certain advertising "triggers" disclosure in ads
- Intestate
- Person dies without a valid will; his or her property will pass to heirs as provided in the state law of descent
- Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS)
- A government agency that governs the practices of fiduciary lenders. OTS was created by the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act (FIRREA)
- Undivided Interest
- See Tenancy in Common
- Voluntary Alienation
- See alienation.
- Grantee
- The person who receives a conveyance of real property from a grantor
- Tenant
- One who holds or possesses lands or tenements by any kind of right or title.
- Contribution
- The appraisal principle that states that the value of any component of a property is what it gives to the value of the whole or what its absence detracts from that value
- Electromagnetic Field EMFs
- Generated by movement of electrical currents; prolonged exposure may cause cancer; major concern for property owners near high voltage line
- Improvement
- Man-made attachment to the land, such as a building, streets, utilities
- Escrow Instructions
- A document that sets forth the duties of the escrow agent, as well as the requirements and obligations of the parties, when a transaction is closed through an escrow
- Broker's Price Opinion
- An opinion of real estate value commissioned by a bank or attorney and provided by a broker
- Fraud
- Intentional misrepresentation of a material fact in order to harm or take advantage of another person
- Primary Mortgage Market
- Mortgage market in which loans are originated; includes commercial banks, savings banks, mutual banks; the market that meets borrowers face to face
- Confession of Judgment Clause
- Permits judgment to entered against a debtor without the creditor's having to institute legal procedures
- Title
- (1) The right to ownership or the ownership of land. (2) The evidence of ownership of land.
- Consideration
- Something of value that gets a person to enter into a contract; owner of property promises to convey marketable title and the buyer promises a certain amount of money
- Dedication
- The voluntary transfer of private property by its owner to the some public use, such as for streets or schools
- Tying Arrangemen
- Illegal antitrust activity. Agreement to sell one product if the buyer purchases another product as well
- Closing Statement
- Detailed cash accounting of a real estate transaction showing all cash received, all charges and credits made and all cash paid out in the transaction
- Developer
- Person who attempt to put land to its most profitable use through the construction of improvements
- Steering
- Illegal practice of channeling home seekers to particular neighborhoods based on race, religion, national origin; an illegal limitation of a purchaser's options
- Unilateral Contract
- A one-sided contract wherein one party makes a promise so as to induce a second party to do something. The second party is not legally bound to perform; however., if the second party does comply, the first party is obligated to keep the promise.
- Basis
- The financial interest that the Internal Revenue Service attributes to an owner of an investment property for the purpose of determining annual depreciation and gain or loss on the sale of the asset. If a property was acquired by purchase, the owner's basis is the cost of the property plus the value of any capital expenditures for improvements to the property, minus any depreciation allowable or actually taken. This new basis is called the adjusted basis.
- General Agent
- Agent hired to represent principal in specific range of matters: long-term broad authority
- Tax Credit
- An amount by which tax owed is reduced directly.
- Sublease
- See subletting
- Satisfaction
- Also know as release; documents indicating that the mortgage has been paid off
- Township Strips
- See Tier
- Surety Bond
- Cover an owner against financial losses resulting from employee's criminal acts or negligence while performing assigned duties
- Default
- The nonperformance of a duty, whether arising under a contract or otherwise; failure to meet an obligation when due
- Estate Taxes
- Federal taxes on decedent's real and personal property
- Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA)
- Federal law that requires certain disclosures to consumers about mortgage loan settlement; prohibits paying or receiving kickbacks and certain kinds of referral fees
- Payment Cap
- The limit on the amount the monthly payment can be increased on an adjustable rate mortgage when the interest rate is adjusted
- Covenant of Quiet Enjoyment
- The covenant implied by law by which a landlord guarantees that a tenant my take possession of leased premises and that the landlord will not interfere in the tenants;s possession or use of the property
- Fee Simple Absolute
- Maximum possible estate or right of ownership of real property, continuing forever
- Tax Sale
- A court ordered sale of real property to raise money to cover delinquent taxes.
- Trustee's Deed
- A deed executed by a trustee conveying land held in a trust.
- Life Estate
- An interest in real or personal property that is limited in duration to the lifetime of its owner or some other designated person or persons
- Government National Mortgage Association
- Ginnie Mae
- Party Wall
- A wall that is located on or at a boundary line between two adjoining parcels of land and is used or is intended to be used by the owners of both properties
- Life Cycle Costing
- In property management, comparing one type of equipment with another based on both purchase cost and operating cost over its expected useful lifetime
- Grantor
- The person transferring title to or an interest in real property to a grantee
- Breach of Contract
- Failure to perform a condition of a contract, such as not paying the rent or mortgage payment
- Taking
- From the "taking" clause of the 5th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, "nor shall public property be taken for public use, without just compensation"
- Real Estate
- Land; a portion of the earth's surface extending downward to the center of the earth and upward infinitely into space, including all things permanently attached to it, whether naturally or artificially
- Federal Reserve System
- Country's central banking system, responsible for nations monetary policy by regulating supply of money and interest rates; requires member banks to keep a reserve
- Closing
- An event where promises made in a sales contract are fulfilled and mortgage loan funds (if any) are distributed to the buyer
- Blockbusting
- Illegal practice of inducing homeowners to sell their properties by telling them that a certain people of a certain race, national origin or religion are moving into the area
- Recording
- Act of entering documents affecting ownership or interests in real estate in the recorder's office established in each county
- Multiple-Listing Service (MLS)
- Marketing organization in which brokers share information and commission with other brokers; sellers gain because of greater exposure to larger market
- Judicial Precedent
- In law, the requirements established by prior court decision
- Capital Gain
- Profit earned from the sale of an asset
- Capping
- Process of laying two to four feet of soil over the top of a landfill site and planting grass to enhance aesthetic value and to prevent erosion
- Implied Agreement
- A contract under which the agreement of the parties is demonstrated by their acts and conduct
- Appurtenance
- Right, privilege or improvement belong to, and passing with the land
- Urea Formaldehyde Form Insulation (UFFI)
- Gases that leak out of UPPI becomes trapped in building, may cause respiratory problems
- Defeasible Fee
- Fee simple estate in which the holder may lose title if a certain event occurs or does not occur: "So long as ....., " or "no alcohol sales," etc.
- Equalization Factor
- A factor (number) by which the assessed value of a property is multiplied to arrive at a value for the property that is in line with statewide tax assessments. The ad valor em tax would be based on this adjusted value
- Antitrust Laws
- Laws to minimize unfair competition. Illegal to conspire to fix prices, allocate customers or markets
- Feudal System
- A system of ownership usually associated with pre-colonial England, in which the king or other sovereign is the source of all rights. The right to possess real property was granted by the sovereign to an individual as a life estate only. Upon the death of the individual, title passed back to the sovereign, not to the decedent's heirs.
- External Depreciation
- Reduction in a property's value caused by outside factors (those that are off the property)
- Automated Underwriting
- Computer system that permits lender to expedite the loan approval process and reduce lending costs
- Trigger Terms
- Specific credit terms, such as down payment, monthly payment and amount of finance charge or term of loan.
- Air Rights
- The right to use the open space above a property usually allowing the surface to be used for another purpose
- Fannie Mae
- Quasi-government agency buys any kind of mortgage loans in secondary market from primary lenders; guarantees timely principal and interest to security holders
- Subordination
- Written agreement between lien holders that changes the priority of mortgage, judgment and other liens under certain circumstances
- Appraisal Report
- An opinion of market value on a property given to a lender or client with detailed and accurate information
- Sick Building Syndrome (SBS)
- An illness caused by poor air quality, typically in office building settings. Symptoms include fatigue, nausea, headache and sensitivity to odors.
- Metes and Bounds
- Legal description that begins at a well marked point and follows the boundaries around the tract, back to the place of beginning
- Government Powers (4)
- Police powers, eminent domain, taxation, escheat
- Subdivision Plat
- See plat map.
- Legal Description
- Description of a specific parcel of real estate complete enough for an independent surveyor to locate and identify it
- Standard Homeowners Insurance
- Insurance package that covers residential property owner against financial loss from fire, theft, public liability, etc.
- Transfer Tax
- Tax on the transfer of real property; may require that stamps be attached to deed
- Promissory Note
- Evidence that a loan was made; states terms of obligation, signed by its maker and is negotiable (transferable to a third party)
- Loan Origination Fee
- A fee charged to the borrower by the lender for making a mortgage loan. The fee is usually computed as a percentage of the loan amount.
- Easement in Gross
- Individual interest in someone else's land; no dominant tenement. Commercial may be assigned, conveyed or inherited; examples: utility lines, sewer, water
- Quitclaim Deed
- Offers the least protection of any deed; conveys a real estate interest, if any; often used to correct misspelled names, etc.
- Subordination
- A written agreement between holders of liens on a property that changes the priority of mortgage, judgment, and other liens under certain circumstances.
- Remainder Interest
- The remnant of an estate that has been conveyed to take effect and be enjoyed after the termination of a prior estate, such as when an owner conveys a life estate to one party and the remainder to another.
- Exclusive Right To Sell Listing
- A listing contract under which the owner appoints a real estate broker as his or her exclusive agent for a designated period of time, to sell the property on the owner's stated terms, and agrees to pay the broker a commission when the property is sold, whether by the broker, the owner, or another broker.
- Jones v. Mayer
- Supreme Court decision upholding Civil Right Act of 1866; under no circumstances is anyone exempted from the law prohibiting racial discrimination
- Ginnie Mae
- HUD division, corporation without stock; administers special-assistance programs and works in tandem with Fannie Mae by guaranteeing payments
- Constructive Eviction
- When the tenant is forced to vacate the property because the landlord failed to provide essential services; tenant is no longer obligated for any further rent
- Income Property
- Property held for current income as well as a potential profit upon its sale
- Negligent Misrepresentation
- Misrepresentation occurring when the broker should have know that the statement about a material fact was false
- Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation
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- Joint and Several Liability
- Each of the individual owners is personally responsible for the total damages
- Pur Autre Vie
- "For the life of another." A life estate pur autre vie is a life estate that is measured by the life of a person other than the grantee
- Financial Institutions, Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act (FIRREA)
- This act restructured the savings and loan association regulatory system; enacted in response to the savings and loan crisis of the 1980s
- Building Permit
- Written governmental permission for the construction, alteration, or demolition of an improvement, showing compliance with building codes and zoning ordinances
- Agency Coupled with an interest
- An agency relationship in which the agent is given an estate or interest in the subject of the agency (the property)
- Heir
- One who might inherit or succeed to an interest in land under the state law of descent when the owner dies without leaving a valid will
- Good Faith Estimate (GFE)
- Settlement costs that borrower is likely to incur; must be given within three business days after loan application; should be pretty accurate
- Brokerage
- Bringing together parties interested in a real estate transaction
- Statute of Limitations
- That law pertaining to the period of time withing which certain actions must be brought to court.
- Unbundling Service
- Offering real estate services in a piecemeal fashion.
- Underground Storage Tanks UST
- Often used to store petroleum, if leaking can contaminate groundwater, only 10% of tank meeds to be underground to require monitoring
- Supply and Demand
- Interrelationship of availability of properties and desire for those properties; real estate is affected by marketplace just like most commodities
- Universal Agent
- A person empowered to do anything the principal could do personally.
- Material Fact
- 34-27-81 (12) A fact that is of significance to a reasonable party which affects the party's decision to enter into a real estate contract.
- Principal
- One who hires; in real estate, the broker (principal) hires salespeople; seller (principal) hires the broker/agent; or buyer (principal) hires broker/agent
- Amortized Loan
- Loan in which the monthly payment consists of principal and interest that partially pay off both each month over the term of the loan
- Strict Liability
- The owner is responsible to the injured party without excuse.
- Mixed Unit Developments (MUD)
- Often self contained, combine variety of uses from commercial to retail to residential
- Buffer Zone
- Strip of land separating one type of use from another; i.e., a park or running trails between the commercial buildings and the residential neighborhood
- Bilateral vs. Unilateral Contract
- Bilateral contract: both parties are legally bound to act as they promised, i.e., lease, purchase agreement. Unilateral contract: only one party is bound to act (option, promissory note)
- Living Trust
- A trust that is created during one's lifetime
- Leasehold Estate
- Tenant's right to occupy real estate during the term of a lease, generally considered to be a personal property interest
- Installment Sale
- A transaction in which the sales price is paid in two or more installments over two or more years. If the sale meets certain requirements, a taxpayer can postpone reporting such income until future years by paying tax each year only on the proceeds received that year
- FHA Loan
- Loan insured by Federal Housing Administration; made by approved lender with FHA's regulation; borrowers pay mortgage insurance premium (MIP)
- Contract
- A legally enforceable promise or set of promises that must be performed and for which, if a breach of the promise occurs, the law provide a remedy. A contract may be either unilateral, by which only one party is bound to act, or bilateral, by which all parties to the instrument are legally bound to act as prescribed
- Mortgage Lien
- Lien on the property of a mortgagor (owner) that provides security for a loan
- Branch Office
- A secondary place of business apart from the principal or main office from which real estate business is conducted. A branch office usually must be run by a licensed real estate broker working on behalf of the broker
- Express vs. Implied Contract
- Express is oral or written contract in which parties express intention in words. An implied contract is a result of the actions of the parties
- Capitalization
- A mathematical process for estimating the value of a property using a proper rate of return on the investment and the annual net operating incomes expected to be produced by the property. The formula is expressed as: Income รท Rate = Value.
- Mortgage
- A conditional transfer or pledge of real estate as security for the payment of a debt. Also, the document creating a mortgage lien.
- Conditional Use Permit
- Written governmental permission allowing the use inconsistent with the zoning, but necessary for the public good; i.e., emergency medical facility in residential area
- Payoff Statement
- See Reduction Certificate
- Annexation
- Change personal property to real property, such as mising sand, stone and cement, and making a sidewalk
- Comprehensive Loss Underwriting Exchange (CLUE)
- A database of consumer claim history that allows insurance companies to access prior claim information in the underwriting and rating process
- Designated Agent
- A license authorized by a broker to act as the agent for a specific principal in a particular transaction
- Federal Reserve System
- The country's central banking system, which is responsible for the nation's monetary policy by regulating the supply of money and interest rates
- Leasehold Estate
- Tenant's right to occupy real estate during term of lease, generally held to be a personal property interest
- Defeasance Clause
- A clause used in leases and mortgages that cancels a specified right upon the occurrence of a certain condition, such as cancellation of a mortgage upon repayment of the mortgage loan.
- Subdivider
- One who buys undeveloped land, divides it into smaller, usable lots and sells the lots to potential users
- Build Related Illness (BRI)
- An illness due to air quality problems, typically toxic substances or pathogens and is a clinically diagnosed condition. Symptoms include asthma, allergies, and hypersensitivity
- Month to Month Tenancy
- A periodic tenancy under which the tenant rents for one month at a time. In the absence of a rental agreement (oral or written) a tenancy is generally considered to be month to month
- Growing Equity Mortgage (GEM)
- A loan in which the monthly payment increase annually, with the increased amount being used to reduce directly the principal balance outstanding and thus shorten the overall term of the loan
- Cost Approach
- Process of estimating property value by adding to estimated land value the appraiser's estimate of the cost of the building new, less depreciation
- Price Fixing
- Brokers conspiring to set fixed compensation rates
- Client
- 34-27-81 (6) A person who has an agency agreement with a broker for brokerage service, whether he or she be buyer or seller.
- Listing Agreement
- A contract between an owner (as Principal) and a real estate broker (as agent) by which the broker is employed as agent to find a buyer for the owner's real estate on the owner's terms, for which service the owner agrees to pay a commission
- Plottage
- The increase in value or utility resulting from the consolidation (assemblage) of two or more adjacent lots into one large lot
- Home Equity Loan
- A loan (sometimes called a line of credit) under which a property owner uses his or her residence as collateral and can then draw funds up to a prearranged amount against the property
- Balance
- The appraisal principle that states that the greatest value in a property will occur when the type and size of the improvements are proportional to each each as well as the land
- Tier (township strip)
- A strip of land six miles wide, extending est and west and numbered north and south according to its distance from the base line in the rectangular (government) survey system of legal description.
- Value
- The power of a good or service to command other goods in exchange for the present worth of future rights to its income or amenities.
- Sole Proprietorship
- Single owner company
- Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act (E-Sign)
- An act that makes contracts (including signatures) and records legally enforceable regardless of the medium in which they are created
- Covenant
- A written agreement between two or more parties in which a party or parties pledge to perform or not perform specified acts with regard to property; usually found in such real estate documents as deeds, mortgages, lasses and contracts for deed
- Buyer's Agent
- A residential real estate broker or salesperson who represents the prospective purchaser in a transaction. The buyer's agent owes the buyer-principal the common law or statutory agency duties.
- Replacement Cost
- Current cost to reconstruct a building to serve the same function but not an exact duplicate of the original
- Puffing
- Exaggerated comments about a property: "This is the best view of the valley."
- Worker's Compensation Act
- Covers claims for medical or hospital payment for injuries sustained by building employees hurt in the course of employment
- Straight Loan
- Loan in which only interest is paid during term of loan with entire principal amount due with the final interest payment
- Security Agreement
- See Uniform Commercial Code
- Nuncupative Will
- An oral will declared by the testator in his or her final illness, made before witnesses and afterward reduced to writing
- Syndicate
- A combination of people or firms formed to accomplish a business venture of mutual interest by pooling resources. In a real estate investment syndicate, the parties own and/or develop property, with the main profits generally arising from the sale of the property.
- Customer
- The third party or non represented consumer for whom some level of service is provided
- Certificate of Title
- Based on examination of public records, a statement of opinion on the status of the title to a parcel of real estate
- Homestead
- Land that is owned and occupied as the family home. In many states a portion of the area or value of this land is protected or exempt from judgments for debts
- Prior Appropriation
- A concept of water ownership in which the landowner's right to use available water is based on a government administered permit system
- Requirements for sales person license
- (a) A license for a broker or a salesperson shall be registered to a specific real estate office and shall be issued only to, and held only by, a person who meets all of the following requirements: (1) Is trustworthy and competent to transact the business of a broker or salesperson in a manner that safeguards the interest of the public. (2) Is a person whose application or license has not been rejected or revoked in any state within two years prior to date of application on any grounds other than failure to pass a written examination. Any applicant whose license has been revoked shall meet all the requirements imposed on an original applicant for a license and shall not be relicensed without the approval of the commissioners. (3) Is at least 19 years old. (4) Is a citizen of the United States or is an alien with permanent resident status. (5) Is a person who, if a nonresident, agrees to sign an affidavit stating the following and in the following form
- Easement by Prescription
- Easement claimant has used another's land for a certain period of time (10 - 20 years) openly, continuously and without the owner's approva
- Density Zoning
- Zoning ordinances that restrict the maximum average number of house per acre that may be built within a particular area, generally a subdivision
- Estate at Sufferance
- Tenant remains on the property, without the landlord's permission, after the lease has expired
- Lease, Lessor, Lessee
- Contract (lease) between landlord (lessor) who gives up possession and tenant (lessee) who pays rent
- Right of Survivorship
- See Joint Tenancy
- Estoppel Certificate
- A document in which a borrower certifies the amount owed on a mortgage loan and the rate of interest
- Expiration of listing
- Specific termination of listing; in most states, failure to specify specific date is grounds for suspension or revocation of license
- Blanket Loan
- Mortgage loan secured by more than one parcel of real estate, provides for each parcel's partial release for mortgage lien upon some repayment; used by developers
- Wraparound Loan
- A method of refinancing in which the new mortgage is placed in a secondary or subordinate, position; the new mortgage includes both the unpaid principal balance of the first mortgage and whatever additional sums are advanced by the lender. In essence it is an additional mortgage in which another lender refinances a borrow by lending an amount over the existing first mortgage amount without disturbing the existence of the first mortgage.
- Dual Agency
- Representing both parties to a transaction. This is unethical unless both parties agree to it, and it is illegal in many states
- Reconveyance Deed
- A deed used by a trustee under a deed of trust to return title to the trustor
- Change
- The appraisal principle that holds that no physical or economic conditions remains constant
- Controlled Business Arrangement
- One stop shopping for real estate consumers; consumer must be informed of relationship among the service providers and that other are available
- Land
- The earth's surface, extending downward to the center of the earth and upward infinitely into space, including things permanently attached by nature, such as trees and water.
- Equalization
- The raising or lowering of assessed values for tax purposes in a particular county or taxing district to make them equal to assessments in other countries or districts
- Life Tenant
- A person in possession of a life estate
- Estate for Years
- Leasehold interest for specific period of time; definite beginning, definite ending; not terminated by death of either party, nor sale of property; no notice required
- Actual Eviction
- The legal process that results in the tenant's being physically removed from the leased premises
- Subrogation
- Substitution of one creditor for another; used by title insurers to acquire from the injured party rights to sue in order to recover any claims they have paid
- Subdivision and Development Ordinances
- Municipal ordinances that establish requirements for subdivisions and development.
- Waste
- An improper use or an abuse of a property by a possessor who holds less than fee ownership, such as a tenant, life tenant, mortgagor, or vendee. Such waste ordinarily impairs the value of the land or the interest of the person holding the title or the reversionary right.
- Assemglage
- Combining of two or more adjoining lots into one larger tract to increase their total value
- Surface Rights
- Ownership rights in a parcel of real estate that are limited to the surface of the property and do not include the air above it (air rights) or the minerals below the surface (subsurface rights).
- Proprietary Lease
- A lease given by the corporation that owns a cooperative apartment building to the shareholder for the shareholder's right as a tenant to an individual apartment
- Truth in Lending Act
- Consumer protection act intended to force lenders to be truthful in their advertising; implemented by Regulation Z
- Redlining
- Illegal practice of refusing to make mortgage loans or issue insurance policies in specific areas for reasons other than economic qualifications of applicants
- Broker Protection Clause
- Protects broker from buyer and seller making contract behind broker's back. Provides for commission if broker's buyer purchases a period after listing expires.
- Brownfields
- Defunct, derelict, or abandoned commercial or industrial sites; many have toxic wastes
- Renewal Option
- A clause in a lease that grants the lessee the privilege of renewing the lease.
- Executed Contract
- A contract in which all parties have fulfilled their promise and thus performed the contract
- General Real Estate Tax
- A tax that is made up of the taxes levied on the real estate by government agencies and municipalities
- Escrow Contract
- An agreement between a buyer, seller and escrow holder setting forth rights and responsibilities for each. An escrow contract is entered into when Earnest money is deposited in a broker's escrow account.
- Farmer Mac
- A government sponsored enterprise that operates similarly to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac but for agricultural loans
- Lot and Block (Recorded Plat)
- Method of describing property that identifies a parcel of land by reference to lot and block numbers within a subdivision, as specified on a recorded subdivision plat
- Reduction Certificate (Payoff Statement)
- The document signed by a lender indicating the amount required to pay a loan balance in full and satisfy the debt; used in the settlement process to protect both the seller's and the buyer's interest.
- Appraisal
- An estimate of the quantity, quality, or value of something. The process through which conclusions of property value are obtained; also refers to the report that set forth the process of estimation and conclusion of value
- Uniform Commercial Code
- Concerned with person property transaction, not real estate, governs the documents when personal property is used as security for a loan
- Partnership
- Under law, a group of individuals who carry on a continuing business for profit as co-owners; regarded as a single entit
- Leverage
- The use of borrowed money to finance an investment
- Reconciliation
- The final step in the appraisal process, in which the appraiser combines the estimates of value received from the sales comparison cost, and income approaches to arrive at a final estimate of market value the subject property.
- Counteroffer
- A new offer made in response to an offer received. It has the effect of rejecting the original offer, which cannot be accepted thereafter unless revived by the offeror
- Township Lines
- All the lines in a rectangular survey system that run east and west, parallel to the base line six miles apart.
- Interest Only Mortgage
- A mortgage that only requires the payment of interest for a stated period of time with the principal due at the end of the term
- Involuntary Lien
- A lien placed on property without the consent of the property owner
- Fair Housing Act
- The federal law that prohibits discrimination in housing based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, and national origin
- Binder
- An agreement that may accompany an earnest money deposit for the purchase of real property as evidence of the purchaser's good faith and intent to complete the transaction
- Government Check
- The 24 mile square parcels composed of 16 townships in the rectangular (government) survey system of legal description
- Electronic Contracting
- A process of integrating information in a real estate transaction between clients, lender, and title and cosing agents electronically
- Procuring Cause
- In order to be paid, the broker starts an uninterrupted chain of events that results in a sale
- Co-Ownership
- Title ownership held by two or more persons who must agree on how the property is used
- Assumption of Mortgage
- Acquiring title to property on which there is an existing mortgage and agreeing to be personally liable for the terms and condition of the mortgage, including payments
- Restrictive Covenants
- A clause in a deed that limits the way the real estate ownership may be used.
- Deed in Trust
- An instrument that grants a trustee under a land trust full power to sell, mortgage, and subdivide a parcel of real estate. The beneficiary controls the trustee's use of these powers under the provisions of the trust agreement
- Vested Interest
- A present right, interest or title to property that gives the holder the right to convey it to another, even thought the right might not be enjoyed by one or both of the parties.
- Agency
- The relationship between a principal and an agent wherein the agent is authorized to represent the principal in certain transaction
- Marketable Title
- Good or clear title, reasonably free from the risk of litigation over possible defects
- Plat Map
- Map of a town, section or subdivision indicating the location and boundaries of individual properties
- Personal Property
- Movable objects, not real property, sometimes called chattels, such as cars, cash, stock
- Preventative Maintenance
- Regularly scheduled maintenance to prevent costly breakdowns; i.e., paining and seasonal servicing of appliances and system.
- Water Rights
- Common law rights held by owners of land adjacent to rivers, lakes or oceans and includes restriction on those rights and land ownership.
- Sales Comparison Approach
- The process of estimating the value of a property by examining and comparing actual sales of comparable properties.
- Sub-Agent
- 34-27-81 (16) A licensee who is empowered to act for another broker in performing real estate brokerage tasks for a principal, and who owes the same duties to the principal as the agent of the principal.
- Casualty Insurance
- Coverage against theft, burglary, vandalism and machinery dames; health and accident insurance; often written for specific risks, i.e., theft, rather than all inclusive
- Ad Valorem Tax
- Tax levied according to value, used to refer to real estate taxes
- Express Agency
- An agency relationship based on a formal agreement between the parties
- Release Deed
- A document, also know as a deed of reconveyance, that transfers all rights given a trustee under a deed of trust loan back to the grantor after the loan has been fully repaid.
- Monuments
- Fixed natural or artificial object used to establish real estate boundaries for a metes and bounds description
- Unity of Ownership
- The four unities that are traditionally needed to create a joint tenancy - unity of title, time, interest and possession.
- Annual Percentage Rate (APR)
- The relationship of the total finance charges associated with a loan. This must be disclosed to borrowers by lenders under the Truth In Lending Act
- Package Loan
- Real estate loan secured by both real and personal property; i.e., new home that includes window treatments and major appliances
- Rent
- Fixed, periodic payment make by tenant to owner for possession and use, usually by prior agreement of the parties
- Quiet Title
- A court action to remove a cloud on the title
- Corrective Maintenance
- Actual repairs that keep building equipment functioning; i.e., repairing a boiler, fixing a leaky faucet, fixing an air conditioner
- Variance
- Permission obtained from zoning authorities to build a structure or conduct a use that is expressly prohibited by current zoning laws; an exception from zoning ordinances
- Accrued Items
- On a closing statement, items of expense that are incurred but not not yet payable, such as interest on a mortgage loan or taxes on real property
- Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA)
- Passed in 1980, established Superfund to clean up uncontrolled hazardous waste site and to respond to spills
- Interim Financing
- A short term loan usually made during the construction phase of a building project (in this case often referred to as a construction loan).
- Nonconforming Use
- Use of property that is permitted to continue after a zoning ordinance prohibiting it has been established for the area
- Specific Performance
- A legal action to compel a party to carry out the terms of a contract.
- Beneficiary
- (1) The person for whom a trust operates or in whose behalf the income from a trust estate is drawn. (2) A lender in a deed of trust loan transaction.
- Actual Notice
- Express information or fact; that which is known, direct knowledg
- Dower
- The legal right or interest, recognized in some states, that a wife acquires in the property her husband held or acquired during their marriage
- Mortgage, Mortgagor, Mortgagee
- Document creating a pledge of real estate as security for the payment of the debt; borrower is the mortagor; lender is the mortgagee
- Trade Fixture
- Personal property: Business items permanently attached by tenant. May be removed up to last day of lease. If left, landlord acquires by process of accession
- Real Estate Investment Syndicate
- See Syndicate
- Township
- The principal unit of the the rectangular (government) survey system. a township is a square with six mile sides and an area of 36 square miles.
- Management Agreement
- Document setting up an agency relationship between owner and property manager who is general agent establishing the rights and duties of each party
- Ethics
- The system of moral principles and rules that becomes standards for professional conduct
- Sharecropping
- In an agricultural lease, the agreement between the landowner and the tenant former to split the crop or the profit from its sale, actually sharing the crop.
- Express Agreement
- An oral or written contract in which the parties state the contract's terms and express their intentions in words
- Cost Recovery
- An Internal Revenue Service term for depreciation
- Development
- Construction of improvements on lnad, i.e., new homes, water lines
- Affidavit of Title
- Written statement, made under oath, that grantor identifies himself and marital status, certifies that there are no new defects on title
- Caveat Emptor
- A Latin phrase meaning Let the Buyer Beware
- Satisfaction of Mortgage
- A document acknowledging the payment of a mortgage debt.
- Implied Warrant of Habitability
- A theory in landlord/tenant law in which the landlord renting residential property implies that the property is habitable and fit for its intended use
- Joint Tenancy
- Co-ownership of real estate; when one of the owners dies, that interest goes to the remaining owners (right of survivorship)
- Building Code
- Ordinance that specifies minimum standards of construction for buildings to protect public safety and health
- Laches
- An equitable doctrine used by courts to bar a legal claim or prevent the assertion of a right because of undue delay or failure to assert the claim or right.
- Open End Loan
- A mortgage loan that is expandable by increments up a maximum dollar amount, the full loan being secured by the same original mortgage
- Subsurface Rights
- Ownership right in a parcel of real estate to the the water, minerals, gas, oil and so forth that lie beneath the surface of the property.
- Gross Lease
- A lease of land only, on which the tenant usually owns a building or is required to build as specified in the lease. Such leases are usually long term net leases; the tenant's rights and obligation continue until the lease expires or is terminated through default
- Quiet Enjoyment Covenant
- Clause in deed guaranteeing that the grantee's title will be good against third parties who might bring court action
- Enabling Acts
- State legislation that confers zoning powers on municipal governments
- Equitable Right of Redemption
- The right of a defaulted property owner to recover the property prior to its sale by paying the appropriate fees and charges
- Comparable
- Properties used in an appraisal report that are substantially equivalent to the subject property
- Salesperson
- Performs real estate activities under supervision of licensed real estate broker
- Purchase Money Mortgage
- Form of seller financing; note and mortgage from buyer are given to seller (lender) as part of the purchase price of the real estate
- Tacking
- Adding or combining successive periods of continuous occupation of real property by adverse possessors. this concept enables someone who has not been in possession for the entire statutory period to establish a claim of adverse possession.
- Real estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA)
- Federal law requires certain disclosure to consumers about mortgage loan closings; prohibits kickbacks, certain referral fees, requires good faith estimate in 3 business day
- Appraiser
- An independent person trained to provide an unbiased estimate of value
- Property Reports
- The mandatory federal and state documents compiled by subdivides and developers to provide potential purchasers with facts about a property, prior to their purchase
- Time is of the Essence
- Phrase in contract that requires the performance of a certain act within a stated period of time
- Computerized Loan Origination
- Electronic network for handling load applications through remote computer terminals linked to various lenders' computer; borrower must pay for this extra service
- Balloon Payment
- Final payment of mortgage loan that is considerably larger than the required periodic payments because the loan amount was not fully amortized
- Cash Rent
- In an agricultural lease, the amount of money given as rent to the landowner at the outset of the lease, as opposed to sharecropping
- Management Plan
- A highly detailed plan that lays out the owner's objectives with the property, as well as what the property manager wants to accomplish and how, including all budgetary information
- Reversion/Remainder Interests
- Future ownership rights after life estate ends; remainder interest passes to a third party; reversionary interest reverts to the original owner or heirs
- Fiduciary Relationship
- Relationship of trust and confidence between principal and agent; agent owes duties of care, obedience, accounting, loyalty and disclosure
- Testate
- Having made and left a valid will.
- Highest and Best Use
- Possible use of a property that would produce the greatest net income and thereby develop the highest value; making an office building where a parking lot once stood
- Liquidity
- The ability to sell an asset and convert it into cash, at a price close to its true value, in a short period of time
- Accretion
- The increase or addition of land by the deposit of and or soil washed up naturally from a river, lake or sea
- Straight Line Method
- A method of calculating depreciation for tax purposes computed by dividing the adjusted basis or a property by the estimated number of years of remaining useful life.
- Attachment
- The act of taking a person's property into legal custody by writ or other judicial order to hold it available for application to that person's debt to a creditor
- Asbestos
- Mineral used extensively in insulation; inhaling fibers can cause sever respiratory diseases; particularly dangerous if friable, i.e., easily crumbled
- Installment Contract
- A contract for the sale of real estate whereby the purchase price is paid in periodic installments by the purchaser, who is in possession of the property even though title is retained by the seller until a future date, which may be not until final payment. Also, called a contract for deed or articles of agreement for warranty deed.
- Acknowledgment
- Formal declaration by someone like a notary that the signature is both voluntary (no force) and genuine (no forgery)
- Blue Sky Law
- Common name for those state and federal laws that regulate the registration and sale of investment securities
- Tenant Improvement
- Alterations to building to meet commercial or industrial tenant's particular space needs; must clarify trade fixtures (tenant's personal property) vs. landlord ownership
- Time Shares
- Buy or lease the use of the property for a certain time frame - often used in resort areas
- Manufactured Housing
- Dwellings that are built off-site and trucked to a building lot where they are installed or assembled
- Progression, Regression
- Value of properties near a better property see their values rise; the opposite is regression; a rundown property will negatively affect neighboring properties
- Competitive Market Analysis (CMA)
- Analysis of market activity among comparable properties; not an appraisal
- Limited Consensual Dual Agent
- test
- Easement by Necessity
- An easement allowed by law as necessary for the full enjoyment of a parcel of real estate; for example, a right of ingress and egress over a grantor's land
- Foreclosure
- A legal procedure whereby property used as security for a debt is sold to satisfy the debt in the event of default in payment of the mortgage note or default of other terms in the mortgage document. The foreclosure procedure bring the rights of all parties to a conclusion and passes the title in the mortgaged property to either the holder of the mortgage or a third party who may purchase the realty at the foreclosure sale, fee of all encumbrances affecting the property subsequent to the mortgage.
- General Warranty Deed
- Deed that offers the most protection in which grantor fully warrants good clear title to the premises
- Levy
- To assess; to seize or collect. To levy a tax is to asses a property and set the rate of taxation. To levy an execution is to officially seize the property of a person in order to satisfy an obligation.
- Depreciation
- (1) In appraisal, a loss of value in property due to any cause, including physical deterioration, functional obsolescence and external obsolescence. (2) In real estate investment, an expense deduction for tax purposes taken over the period of ownership of income property
- Fixture
- Item that was once personal property and is now permanently affixed and is real property, such as a chandelier or ceiling fan
- Market
- Place where goods are bought and sold, price is established
- Listing Broker
- The broker in a multiple listing situation from whose office a listing agreement is initiated, as opposed to the cooperating broker, from whose office negotiations leading up to a sale are initiated. The listing broker and the cooperating broker may be the same person
- Real Property
- Interests, benefits and rights inherent in real estate ownership
- Voluntary Lien
- A lien placed on property with the knowledge and consent of the property owner.
- Transaction Broker
- Intermediary between buyer and seller who assists bother parties, though not an agent of either. AKA nonagent, facilitator, coordinator or contract broker
- Earnest Money
- Money deposited by a buyer under the terms of a contract, to be forfeited if the buyers defaults but applied to the purchase price if the sale is closed
- Fee Simple
- The highest interest in real estate recognized by the law; the holder is entitled to all rights to the property
- Categories of Real Property
- Residential, Commercial, Industrial, Agricultural, Special Projects
- Eviction
- A legal process to oust a person from possession of real estate
- Multiple Listing Clause
- A provision in an exclusive listing for the authority and obligations on the part of the listing broker to distribute the listing to other brokers in the multiple listing organization
- Front Footage
- The measurement of a parcel of land by the number of feet of street or road frontage
- Unenforceable Contract
- Contract that has all the elements of a valid contract, yet neither party can sue the other for performance; an unsigned contract is usually unenforceable
- Cooperative
- Multi tenant building owned by trust or corporation; tenants own share of stock and proprietary lease
- Rescission
- The practice of one party canceling or terminated a contract, which has the effect of returning the parties to their original positions before the contract was made.
- Fair Housing Violation Enforcement
- Unlimited punitive damages, actual damages, injunction, fines ranging from $10,000 to $50,000
- Carbon Monoxide
- Colorless, odorless poisonous gas produced as a by-product of incomplete combustion; can be dangerous if not properly ventilate
- Point of Beginning
- The starting point in a metes and bounds legal description; these description must follow the boundaries back to the point of beginning
- Grantor, Grantee
- n a deed, the grantor is the person transferring title in real estate to the grantee
- Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation
- Corporation buys primarily conventional mortgage loans in secondary market, does not guarantee principal and interest payments of these mortgages
- Littoral Rights
- (1) A land owner's claim to use water in large navigable lakes and ocean's adjacent to his or her property. (2) The ownership rights to land bordering these bodies of water up to the high water mark.
- Real Estate Mortgage Investment Conduit (REMIC)
- A tax entity that issues multiple classes of investor interests (securities) back by a pool of mortgages.
- Market Value
- Most probable price the property will sell for in an arm's-length transaction under normal conditions on the open market
- Holdover Tenancy
- A tenancy whereby a lessee retains possession of leased property after the lease has expired and the landlord, by continuing to accept rent, agrees to the tenant's continued occupancy as defined by state law
- Devise
- A gift of real property by will. The donor is the devisor and the recipient is the devisee
- Credit, Debit
- On closing statement, amount entered in a person's favor; either an amount that party has paid or amount for which party must be reimbursed; debit is amount charged
- Realtor (r)
- Member of National Association of REALTORS, adhere to Code of Ethics
- Special Warranty Deed
- A deed in which the grantor warrants, or guarantees, the title only against defects arising during the period of his or her tenure and ownership of the property and not against defects existing before that time, generally using the language, "by, through, or under the grantor but not otherwise."
- Severalty
- Ownership of real estate by one person only; although a corporation (single entity) can own in severalty
- Open Listing
- Multiple agents; only the selling agent (broker) entitled to commission; seller retains right to sell independently without obligation to pay anyone a commiss
- Zoning Ordnance
- An exercise of police power by a municipality to regulate and control the character and use of property
- Priority
- Order of position or time; priority of liens is by chronological order, first recorded having first claim except that taxes always have first place even if not recorded
- Special Assessment
- Tax or levy against only the properties that will benefit from a proposed public improvement like a sewer or paving a street
- Partition
- Court procedure dividing up cotenants' interest in real property when the parties do not all voluntarily agree to terminate the co-ownership
- Incorporeal Right
- A nonpossessory right in real estate; for example, an easement or a right of way
- Planned Unit Developments (PUD)
- Planned combination of diverse land uses, such as housing, recreation and shipping, in one contained development or subdivision.
- Air Lot
- Designated airspace over a piece of land; my be transferred; used in describing a condominium unit
- Physical Characteristics of Real Estate (3)
- Immobility, Indestrucibility, Uniqueness (nonhomogeneity)
- Involuntary Alienation
- See alienation