Glossary
To help you better understand the terminology related to a real estate
transaction, the following is a comprehensive real estate glossary of terminology and
definitions.
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- A -
ABANDONMENT - The voluntary
surrender or relinquishment of possession of
real property with the intention of terminating
one's possession or interest, but without
vesting this interest in any other person.
ABATEMENT - A reduction or
decrease in amount, degree, intensity or worth.
ABSORPTION RATE - An
estimate of the rate at which a particular
classification of space - such as new office
space, new housing, new condominium units and
the like - will be sold or occupied each year.
ABSTRACT OF TITLE - A
concise, summarized history of the title to a
specific parcel of real property, together with
a statement of all liens and encumbrances
affecting the property. The abstract of title
does not guarantee or assure the validity of the
title of the property. It merely discloses those
items about the property which are of public
record, and thus does not reveal such things as
encroachments, forgeries, and the like.
ACCELERATED DEPRECIATION - A
method of calculating the depreciation of
certain property (that property which is used in
a trade or business, or which is held for the
production of income) at a faster rate than
would be achieved from using the straight line
method of depreciation.
ACCELERATION CLAUSE - A
clause in a promissory note, agreement of sale,
or mortgage which gives the lender the right to
call all sums due and payable in advance of the
fixed payment date upon the occurrence of a
specified event, such as a sale, default,
assignment or further encumbrance of the
property.
ACCEPTANCE - The expression
of the intention of the person receiving an
offer (offeree, usually the seller) to be bound
by the terms of the offer.
ACCESS - A general or
specific right of ingress and egress to a
particular property.
ACCRETION - The gradual and
imperceptible addition to land by alluvial
deposits of soil through natural causes, such as
shoreline movement caused by streams or rivers.
ACCRUED - That which has
accumulated over a period of time such as
accrued depreciation, accrued interest or
accrued expenses.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT - A formal
declaration made before a duly authorized
officer, usually a Notary Public, by a person
who has signed a document.
ACRE - A measure of land
equaling 43,560 square feet; 4,840 square yards;
160 square rods.
ADHESION CONTRACT - A
contract which is very one-sided and favors the
party who drafted the document.
AD VALOREM - Latin for
"according to valuation," usually referring to a
type of tax or assessment.
ADVERSE POSSESSION - The
acquiring of title to real property owned by
someone else, by means of open, notorious and
continuous possession for the statutory period
of time (20 years in Hawaii).
AFFIDAVIT - A sworn
statement reduced to writing and made under oath
before a Notary Public or other official
authorized by law to administer an oath.
AGENCY - A relationship
created when one person, the "principal,"
delegates to another, the "agent," the right to
act on the principal's behalf in business
transactions and to exercise some degree of
discretion while so acting. An agency gives rise
to a fiduciary relationship and imposes on the
agent, as the fiduciary of the principal,
certain duties, obligations and high standards
of good faith and loyalty.
AGENT - One who is
authorized to represent and to act on behalf of
another person (called the principal). A real
estate broker is the agent of his client, be it
the seller or buyer, to whom he owes a fiduciary
obligation. A salesman is the agent of his
broker and does not have a direct personal
contractual relationship with either the seller
or buyer.
AGREEMENT OF SALE - An
agreement between the seller (vendor) and buyer
(vendee) for the purchase of real property.
AIR RIGHTS - The rights to
the use of the open space or vertical plane
above a property. Ownership of the land includes
the right to all air above the property.
ALIENATION CLAUSE - A clause
in a promissory note or mortgage which provides
that the balance of the secured debt becomes
immediately due and payable at the option of the
mortgagee upon the alienation of the property by
the mortgagor.
ALLODIAL SYSTEM - The free
ownership of land by individuals.
AMENITIES - Features, both
tangible and intangible, which enhance and add
to the desirability of real estate.
AMORTIZATION - The gradual
repayment of a debt by means of systematic
payments of principal and interest over a set
period, where at the end of the period there is
a zero balance.
ANCHOR TENANT - Major
department or chain stores which are
strategically located at shopping centers so as
to give maximum exposure to smaller satellite
stores.
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE - The
relationship of the total Finance Charge to the
total amount to be finance as required under the
Federal Truth-in-Lending Law.
APPRAISAL - The process of
estimating, fixing, or setting the market value
of real property. An appraisal may take the form
of a lengthy report, a completed form, a simple
letter, or even an oral report.
APPRECIATION - An increase
in the worth or value of property due to
economic or related causes, which may prove to
be either temporary or permanent.
APPURTENANT - Belonging to;
adjunct; appended or annexed.
ARBITRATION - The
non-judicial submission of a controversy to
selected third parties for their determination
in the manner provided by agreement or by law.
ASSESSED VALUATION - The
value of real property as established by the
state government for purposes of computing real
property taxes.
ASSESSMENT - A specific levy
for a definite purpose, such as adding curbs or
sewers in a neighborhood. Individual condominium
owners are subject to special assessments
benefiting the project as a whole and not funded
through regular maintenance charges.
ASSIGNMENT - The transfer of
the right, title and interest in the property of
one person, the assignor, to another, the
assignee. In real estate, there are assignments
of mortgages, contracts, agreements of sale,
leases, and options, among others.
ASSUMPTION OF MORTGAGE - The
act of acquiring title to property which has an
existing mortgage on it and agreeing to be
personally liable for the terms and conditions
of the mortgage, including payments.
ATTACHMENT - The legal
process of seizing the real or personal property
of a defendant in a lawsuit, by levy or judicial
order, and holding it in the custody of the
courts as security for satisfaction of the
judgment which the plaintiff may recover in any
action upon a contract, express or implied.
ATTORNEY-IN-FACT - One who
is authorized by another to act in his place
under a power of attorney.
ATTORNMENT - The act of a
tenant formally agreeing to become the tenant of
a successor landlord; as in attorning to a
mortgagee who has foreclosed on the leased
premises.
- B -
BALLOON
PAYMENT - The final payment of a note
or obligation, which is substantially larger
than the previous installment payments, and
which repays the debt in full; the remaining
balance which is due at the maturity of a note
or obligation.
BARGAIN AND SALE DEED - A
deed which recites a consideration and conveys
all of the grantor's interest in the property to
the grantee.
BASE LINE AND MERIDIAN - An
imaginary set of lines used by surveyors to
locate and describe land under the Rectangular
Survey Method of property description used in
most mainland states.
BASIS - The financial
interest which IRS attributes to the owner of an
asset for purposes of determining annual
depreciation and gain or loss on sale of the
asset.
BENCH MARK - A mark affixed
to a permanent reference or monument, such as an
iron post or a brass marker (usually embedded in
a cement sidewalk), used to establish elevations
and altitudes over a surveyed area.
BENEFICIARY - A person who
receives the benefits from the gifts or acts of
another, such as one who is designated to
receive the proceeds from a will, insurance
policy or trust.
BILATERAL CONTRACT - A
contract in which each party promises to perform
an act in exchange for the other party's promise
to perform.
BILL OF SALE - A written
agreement by which one person sells, assigns or
transfers his right to, or interest in, personal
property to another.
BLANKET MORTGAGE - A
mortgage which is secured by several structures
or a number of lots. A blanket mortgage is often
used to finance proposed subdivisions or
development projects, especially cooperatives.
BLUE SKY LAWS - State
securities laws designed to protect the public
from fraudulent practices in the promotion and
sale of securities, e.g., through limited
partnerships, syndications, bonds.
BOOT - Money or other
property given to make up any difference in
value or equity between two exchanged
properties.
BOUNDARIES - The perimeters
or limits of a parcel of land as fixed by legal
description which is usually a metes and bounds
description.
BREACH OF CONTRACT -
Violation of any of the terms or conditions of a
contract without legal excuse; default,
non-performance, such as failure to make payment
when due.
BROKER - One who acts as an
intermediary between parties to a transaction. A
real estate broker is a properly licensed person
who, for a valuable consideration, serves as an
agent to others to facilitate the sale or lease
of real property.
BROKERAGE - That aspect of
the real estate business which is concerned with
bringing together the parties and completing a
real estate transaction. Brokerage involves
exchanges, rentals, trade-ins and management of
property, as well as sales.
BUDGET MORTGAGE - A mortgage
with payments set up to cover more than interest
and principal reductions.
BUFFER ZONE - A strip of
land separating one parcel from another.
BUILDING PERMIT - A written
permission granted by the County Building
Department and required prior to beginning the
construction of a new building or other
improvement (including fences, fence walls,
retaining walls and swimming pools).
BUILDING RESIDUAL TECHNIQUE
- A method of determining the value of
an improvement normally used in appraising
income property.
BULK TRANSFERS - Any
transfer in bulk, and not in the ordinary course
of the seller's business, of a major part of the
materials, inventory or supplies of an
enterprise.
BUNDLE OF RIGHTS - An
ownership concept describing all those legal
rights which attach to the ownership of real
property, including the right to sell, lease,
encumber, use, enjoy, exclude, will, etc.
BUSINESS DAYS - Days of the
week excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays;
normal working days.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES - Any
type of business which is for sale.
- C -
CANTILEVER - A projecting
beam or overhanging portion supported at one end
only.
CAPITAL GAIN - The taxable
profit derived from the sale of a capital asset.
CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT - Any
structure which is erected as a permanent
improvement to real property; any improvement
which is made to extend the useful life of a
property, or to add to the value of the
property.
CAPITALIZATION - A
mathematical process for converting net income
into an indication of value, commonly used in
the income approach to appraisal.
CAP RATE (CAPITALIZATION RATE)
- The percentage selected for use in
the income approach to valuation of improved
property. The cap rate is designed to reflect
the recapture of the original investment over
the economic life of the improvement, to give
the investor an acceptable rate of return
(yield) on the original investment, and to
provide for the return on borrowed capital.
CERTIFICATE OF REASONABLE VALUE (CRV)
- A certificate issued by the Veterans
Administration setting forth a property's
current market value estimate, based upon a VA
approved appraisal.
CERTIFIED CHECK - A check
which the bank guarantees to be good, and
against which a stop payment is ineffective.
CERTIFIED PROPERTY MANAGER -
A professional property manager who has
qualified for membership in and is a member of
the Institute of Real Estate Management, and is
designated a CPM.
CHAIN OF TITLE - The
recorded history of matters which affect the
title to a specific parcel of real property,
such as ownership, encumbrances and liens,
usually beginning with the original recorded
source of the title.
CHATTEL - Personal property
which is tangible and moveable.
CLEAR TITLE - Title to
property that is free from liens, defects or
other encumbrances, except those which the buyer
has agreed to accept, such as mortgage to be
assumed, the ground lease of record, and the
like; established title; title without clouds.
CLIENT TRUST ACCOUNT - An
account set up by a broker to keep client's
monies segregated from the broker's general
funds.
CLOSING - The final stage of
consummating a real estate transaction when the
seller delivers title to the buyer, in exchange
for the purchase price.
CLOSING COSTS - Expenses of
the sale which must be paid in addition to the
purchase price (in the case of the buyer's
expenses), or be deducted from the proceeds of
the sale (in the case of the seller's expenses).
CLOSING STATEMENT - A
detailed cash accounting of a real estate
transaction prepared by an escrow officer or
other person designated to process the mechanics
of the sale, showing all cash that was received,
all charges and credits which were made, and all
cash that was paid out in the transaction; also
called a settlement statement.
CLOUD ON TITLE - Any
document, claim, unreleased lien or encumbrance
which many impair or injure the title to
property or make the title doubtful because of
its apparent or possible validity.
CLUSTER DEVELOPMENT - The
grouping of housing units on less than normal
size homesites, with the remaining land being
devoted to common areas.
CODE OF ETHICS - A written
system of standards of ethical conduct. The Code
of Ethics of the National Association of
Realtors, first written in 1913, establishes the
high standards of conduct for members of the
Realtor community.
COLLATERAL - Something of
value given or pledged as security for a debt or
obligation. The collateral for a real estate
mortgage loan is the mortgaged property itself,
which has been hypothecated.
COLOR OF TITLE - A condition
which has the appearance of good title, but
which in fact is not valid title, as where title
is founded on some written document which on its
face appears valid and effective, but which is
actually invalid.
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - A
classification of real estate which includes
income producing property such as office
buildings, gasoline stations, restaurants,
shopping centers, hotels and motels, parking
lots and stores, and other similar uses.
COMMINGLING - To mingle or
mix; for example, to deposit client funds in the
broker's personal or general account. A licensee
found guilty of commingling can have the license
suspended or revoked by the Real Estate
Commission.
COMMISSION - The
compensation paid to a real estate
broker(usually by the seller) for services
rendered in connection with the sale or exchange
of real property.
COMMITMENT - A pledge or
promise to do a certain act, such as the promise
of a lending institution to loan a certain
amount of money at a fixed rate of interest to a
qualified buyer, provided the loan is obtained
on or before a certain date.
COMMON AREAS - Land or
improvements designated for the use and benefit
of all residents, property owners and tenants.
COMMON ELEMENTS - Parts of
the property which are necessary or convenient
to the existence, maintenance and safety of the
condominium, or are normally in common use by
all of the condominium residents.
COMMON LAW - That body of
law which is based on usage, general acceptance,
and custom, as manifested in decrees and
judgments of the courts; judge-made law, as
opposed to codified or statutory law.
COMMON WALL - A wall
separating two living units.
COMMUNITY PROPERTY - A
system of property ownership based on the theory
that each spouse has an equal interest in
property acquired by the efforts of either
spouse during marriage.
COMPARABLES - Recently sold
properties which are similar to a particular
property being evaluated, and which are used to
indicate a reasonable fair market value for the
subject property.
COMPOUND INTEREST - Interest
which is computed upon the principal sum plus
accrued interest.
CONCESSIONS - Discounts
given by landlords to prospective tenants to
induce them to sign a lease.
CONDEMNATION - Either a
judicial or administrative proceeding to
exercise the power of eminent domain, i.e., the
power of the government to take private property
for public use.
CONDOMINIUM OWNERSHIP - An
estate in real property consisting of an
individual interest in an apartment or
commercial unit, and an undivided common
interest in the common areas such as the land,
parking areas, elevators, stairways, and the
like.
CONSIDERATION - An act or
forbearance, or the promise thereof, which is
offered by one party to induce another to enter
into a contract; that which is given in exchange
for something from another.
CONSTRUCTIVE EVICTION - Acts
done by a landlord which so materially disturb
or impair the tenant's enjoyment of the leased
premises that a tenant is effectively forced to
move out and terminate the lease without
liability for any further rent.
CONSTRUCTIVE NOTICE - Notice
of certain facts which are implied bylaw to a
person because he could have discovered the fact
by reasonable diligence or by inquiry into
public records.
CONTINGENCY - A provision
placed in contract which requires the completion
of a certain act or the happening of a
particular event before a contract is binding.
CONTRACT - A legal agreement
between competent parties who agree to perform
or refrain from performing certain acts for a
consideration. In real estate, there are many
different types of contracts, including
listings, contracts of sale, options, mortgages,
assignments, leases, deeds, escrow agreements,
and loan commitments, among others.
CONVEYANCE - The transfer of
title to real property by means of a written
instrument such as a deed or an assignment of
lease.
COOPERATING BROKER - A
broker who joins with another broker in the sale
of real property.
COOPERATIVE OWNERSHIP -
Cooperative ownership of an apartment unit means
that the apartment owner has purchased shares in
a corporation which holds title to the entire
apartment building.
CO-TENANCY
- A form of concurrent property ownership in
which two or more persons own an undivided
interest in the same property.
COUNTER-OFFER
- A new offer made as a reply to an offer
received from another; this has the effect of
rejecting the original offer, which cannot
thereafter be accepted unless revived by the
offeror's repeating it.
COURTESY TO BROKERS - The
practice of sharing commissions with cooperating
brokers.
COVENANT - A written
agreement or promise of two or more parties by
which either pledges to perform or not to
perform specified acts on a property, or which
specifies certain uses or non-uses of the
property.
COVENANTS AND CONDITIONS -
Covenants are promises contained in contracts,
the breach of which would entitle a person to
damages. Conditions, on the other hand, are
contingencies, qualifications or occurrences
upon which an estate or property right would be
gained or lost.
COVENANTS RUNNING WITH THE LAND
- Covenants which become part of the
property and benefit or bind successive owners
of the property.
CUL DE SAC - A street which
is open at one end only, and which usually has a
circular turnaround; a blind alley.
CUSTOMER TRUST FUND (CTF) -
An impound account maintained for the purpose of
setting up a reserve to pay certain periodic
obligations such as real property taxes,
insurance premiums, lease rent, and maintenance
fees.
- D -
DEALER - An IRS designation
for a person who regularly buys and sells real
property.
DEBT SERVICE - The amount of
money needed to meet the periodic payments of
principal and interest when a debt is amortized.
DECLARATION OF RESTRICTIONS
- A statement of all the covenants,
conditions and restrictions ("CC&R's") which
affect a parcel of land.
DEDICATION - The application
of privately owned land to the public for no
consideration, with the intent that the land
will be accepted and used for public purposes.
DEED - A written instrument
by which a property owner "grantor" transfers to
a "grantee" an ownership in real property.
DEED OF TRUST - A legal
document in which title to property is
transferred to a third party trustee as security
for an obligation owed by the trustor (borrower)
to the beneficiary(lender).
DEFAULT - Failure to fulfill
a duty or promise or failure to perform any
obligation or required act. The most common
occurrence of default on the part of a buyer or
lessee is non-payment of money.
DEFERRED COMMISSIONS -
Commissions which are earned but not yet fully
paid.
DEFICIENCY JUDGEMENT - A
judgment against a borrower, endorser, or
guarantor for the balance of the debt issued
when the security for a loan is insufficient to
satisfy the debt.
DENSITY - A term, frequently
used in connection with zoning requirements,
which means the maximum number of building units
per acre or the number of occupants or families
per unit of land area (acre, square mile, etc.);
usually the ratio of land area to improvement
area.
DEPOSIT - Money offered by a
prospective buyer as an indication of good faith
in entering into a contract to purchase; earnest
money; security for the buyer's performance of a
contract.
DEPRECIATION (APPRAISAL) - A
loss in value due to any cause; any condition
which adversely affects the value of an
improvement.
DEPRECIATION (TAX) - For tax
purposes, depreciation is an expense deduction
taken for an investment in depreciable property.
DEPTH TABLE - Tables of
percentage designed to provide a uniform system
of measuring the additional value to lots which
accrues because of added depth, with the extra
depth valued according to the added utility
which it creates.
DESCENT - The acquisition of
an estate by inheritance, where an heir succeeds
to the property by operation of law. Descent
literally means the hereditary succession of an
heir to property of an ancestor who dies
intestate.
DESCRIPTION - The portion of
a conveyance document which defines the property
being transferred.
DEVELOPER - One who attempts
to put land to its most profitable use by the
construction of improvements.
DEVISE - A transfer of real
property under a will.
DISCLAIMER - A statement
denying legal responsibility, frequently found
in the form of, "There are no promises,
representations, oral understandings or
agreements except as contained herein."
DISCOUNT POINTS - An added
loan fee charged by a lender to make the yield
on a lower-than-market interest VA or FHA loan
competitive with higher interest conventional
loans.
DISCRIMINATION - The act of
making a distinction against or in favor of a
person on the basis of the group or class to
which the person belongs; the failure to treat
people equally.
DISTRAINT - The right of a
landlord, pursuant to a court order, to seize a
tenants belongings for rents in arrears.
DOMICILE - The state where
an individual has his true, fixed, permanent
home and principal business establishment and to
which place he has the intention of returning
whenever he is absent.
DOUBLE ESCROW - An escrow
set up to handle the concurrent sale of one
property and purchase of another property by
same party.
DOWER - The legal right or
interest a wife acquires in property her husband
held or acquired anytime during marriage.
DUAL AGENCY - Representing
both principals (buyer and seller) to a
transaction.
DUE ON SALE CLAUSE - A form
of acceleration clause found in some mortgages,
especially savings and loan mortgages, requiring
the mortgagor to pay off the mortgage debt when
selling the secured property, thus resulting in
automatic maturity of the note at the lender's
option.
DUPLEX - A structure that
provides housing accommodations for two families
by having separate entrances, kitchens,
bedrooms, lanais, living rooms and bathrooms. A
two-family dwelling.
DURESS - Unlawful constraint
or action exercised upon a person whereby he is
forced to perform some act against his will. A
contract entered into under duress is void.
- E -
EASEMENT - A property
interest which one person has in land owned by
another entitling the holder of the interest to
limited use or enjoyment of the other's land.
EASEMENT IN GROSS - The
limited right of one person to use another's
land (servient estate), which right is not
created for the benefit of any land owned by the
owner of the easement; that is, there is no
dominant estate, as the easement attaches
personally to the owner, not to the land.
EMBLEMENTS - Growing crops
(called "fructus industriales"),such as rice and
taro, which are produced annually through labor
and industry.
EMINENT DOMAIN - The right
of government, both state and federal, to take
private property for a necessary public use,
with just compensation paid to the owner.
ENCROACHMENT - An
unauthorized invasion or intrusion of a fixture
or other real property wholly or partly upon
another's property, thus reducing the size and
value of the invaded property.
ENCUMBRANCE - Any claim,
lien, charge or liability attached to and
binding upon real property which may lessen the
value of the property but will not necessarily
prevent transfer of title.
ENTIRETY, TENANCY BY - A
form of joint ownership of property between
husband and wife with the right of survivorship.
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT
- A report which includes a detailed
description of a proposed development project
with emphasis on the existing environment
setting, viewed from both a local and regional
perspective, and a discussion of the probable
impact of the project on the environment during
all phases.
EQUITY - That interest or
value remaining in property after payment of all
liens or other charges on the property. A
owner's equity is normally the monetary interest
over and above the mortgage indebtedness.
ERRORS AND OMISSIONS INSURANCE
- A form of insurance which covers
liabilities for errors, mistakes and negligence
in the usual listing and selling activities of a
real estate office or escrow company.
ESCHEAT - The reversion of
property to the state when a decedent dies
intestate and there are no heirs capable of
inheriting, or when the property is abandoned.
ESCROW - The process by
which money and/or documents are held by a
disinterested third person (a "stakeholder")
until the satisfaction of the terms and
conditions of the escrow instructions (as
prepared by the parties to the escrow).
ESTOPPEL - A legal doctrine
by which a person is prevented from asserting
rights or facts which are inconsistent with a
previous position or representation he had made
by his act, conduct or silence.
ETHICS - A system of moral
principles, rules and standards of conduct.
EVICTION - The legal process
of removing a tenant from possession of the
premises for some breach of the lease contract.
EXCHANGE - A transaction in
which all or part of the consideration for the
purchase of real property is the transfer of
property of a like kind.
EXCLUSIVE AGENCY - A written
listing agreement giving one agent the right to
sell property for a specified time, but
reserving to the owner the right to sell the
property himself without payment of any
commission.
EXCLUSIVE LISTING - A
written listing of real property in which the
seller agrees to appoint only one broker to sell
the property for a specified period of time. The
two types of exclusive listings are the
exclusive agency and the exclusive right to
sell.
EXECUTIVE - The act of
making a document legally valid, such as
formalizing a contract by signing, or
acknowledging and delivering a deed.
EXECUTOR - A person
appointed by a testator to carry out the
directions and requests in the last will and
testament, and to dispose of property according
to the provisions of the will.
EXECUTORY CONTRACT - A
contract in which one or both of the parties has
not yet performed.
EXTENDER CLAUSE - A "carry
over" clause (referred to as a safety clause)
contained in a listing which provides that a
broker is still entitled to a commission for a
set of period of time after the listing has
expired if the property is sold to a former
prospect of the broker.
EXTENSION - An agreement to
continue the period of performance beyond the
specified period.
- F -
FAIR MARKET
VALUE - The highest monetary price
which a property would bring, if offered for
sale for a reasonable period of time in a
competitive market, to a seller who is willing
but not compelled to sell, from a buyer, willing
but not compelled to buy, both parties being
fully informed of all the purposes to which the
property is best adapted and is capable of being
used.
FARM AREA - A selected
geographical area or one specific building to
which a real estate salesperson devotes special
attention and study.
FEASIBILITY STUDY - An
analysis of a proposed project with emphasis on
the attainable income, probable expenses, and
most advantageous use and design.
FEDERAL HOUSING ADMINISTRATION (FHA)
- The FHA was set up in1934 under the
National Housing Act to encourage improvement in
housing standards and conditions, to provide an
adequate home financing system by insurance of
housing mortgages and credit, and to exert a
stabilizing influence on the mortgage market.
FEDERAL TAX LIEN - A federal
lien which attaches to real property, either if
the federal estate tax is not paid, or if the
taxpayer has violated the federal income tax or
payroll tax laws.
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION (FTC)
- A federal agency created to
investigate and eliminate unfair and deceptive
trade practices in business.
FEE SIMPLE - The largest
estate one can possess in real property. A fee
simple estate is the least limited interest and
the most complete and absolute ownership in
land: it is of indefinite duration, freely
transferable and inheritable. Fee simple title
is sometimes referred to as "the fee.
FIDUCIARY - A relationship
which implies a position of trust or confidence
wherein one is usually entrusted to hold or
manage property or money for another. Among the
obligations a fiduciary owes to the principal
are duties of loyalty; obedience; full
disclosure; the duty to use skill, care and
diligence; and the duty to account for all
monies.
FILLED LAND - An area where
the grade has been raised by depositing or
dumping dirt, gravel or lava rock.
FINANCE CHARGE - The total
of all costs imposed directly or indirectly by
the creditor and payable either directly or
indirectly by the customer, as defined under the
federal Truth-in-Lending Law.
FINANCE FEE - A mortgage
brokerage fee to cover the expenses incurred in
placing the mortgage with a lending institution;
a mortgage service charge or origination fee.
FINANCIAL STATEMENT - A
formal statement of the financial status and net
worth of a person or company, setting forth and
classifying assets and liabilities as of a
specified date.
FINDER'S FEE - A fee paid to
someone for producing a buyer to purchase or a
seller to list property; also called a referral
fee.
FIRM COMMITMENT - A definite
undertaking by a lender to loan a set amount of
money at a specified interest rate for a certain
term.
FIRST REFUSAL, RIGHT OF -
The right of a person to have the first
opportunity either to purchase or lease real
property.
FISCAL YEAR - A business
year used for tax, corporate or accounting
purposes, as opposed to a calendar year.
FIXTURE - An article which
was once personal property but has been so
affixed to the real estate that it has become
real property (e.g. stoves, bookcases, plumbing,
etc.). If determined to be a fixture, then the
article passes with the property even though it
is not mentioned in the deed.
FLAG LOT - A land parcel
having the configuration of an extended flag and
pole. The pole represents access to the site
which is usually located to the rear of another
lot fronting a main street.
FLOOR AREA RATIO - The ratio
of floor area to land area expressed as a
percent or decimal, which is determined by
dividing the total floor area on a zoning lot by
the lot area.
FLOOR DUTY - A frequent
practice in real estate brokerage offices of
assigning one sales agent the responsibility for
handling all telephone calls and office visitors
for a specified period of time.
FORECLOSURE - A legal
procedure whereby property used as security for
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.
FRAUD - Any form of deceit,
trickery, breach of confidence or
misrepresentation by which one party attempts to
gain some unfair or dishonest advantage over
another.
FREE AND CLEAR TITLE - Title
to real property which is absolute and
unencumbered by any liens, mortgages, clouds or
other encumbrances.
FRONTAGE - The length of a
property abutting a street or body of water;
that is, the number of feet that "front" the
street or water.
FUNCTIONAL OBSOLESCENCE - A
loss in value of an improvement due to
functional inadequacies, often caused by age or
poor design.
- G -
GARNISHMENT - A legal
process designed to provide a means for
creditors to safeguard for themselves the
personal property of a debtor which is in the
hands of a third party ("garnishee").
GENERAL AGENT - One who is
authorized to perform any and all acts
associated with the continued operation of a
particular job or a certain business.
GENERAL CONTRACTOR - A
construction specialist who enters into a formal
construction contract with a land owner or
master lessee to construct a real estate
building or project.
GENERAL PARTNER - A co-owner
of a partnership who is empowered to enter into
contracts on behalf of the partnership and who
is fully liable for all partnership debts.
GIFT TAX - A graduated
federal tax paid by a donor upon making a gift.
GOOD FAITH - Bona fide. An
act is done in good faith if it is in fact done
honestly, whether it be done negligently or not.
GOOD WILL - An intangible,
salable asset arising from the reputation of a
business.
GOVERNMENT SURVEY - A system
of land description in which large blocks of
land are divided into tracts bounded by
imaginary lines conforming to the true meridian.
GRADUATED RENTAL LEASE - A
lease in which the rent payments commence at a
fixed, often low rate, but "step up" or increase
at set intervals as the lease term matures.
GRANDFATHER CLAUSE - Common
expression used to convey the idea that
something which was once permissible continues
to be permissible despite changes in the
controlling law.
GRANTEE - The person who
receives from the grantor a grant of real
property.
GRANTOR - The person
transferring title to, or an interest in, real
property. A grantor must be competent to convey;
thus, for example, an insane person cannot
convey title to real property.
GROSS AREA - The total floor
area of a building measured from the exterior of
the walls (excluding those unenclosed).
GROSS INCOME MULTIPLIER - A
useful rule of thumb to estimate market value of
income producing residential property. The
multiplier is derived by using comparable sales
divided by the actual or estimated monthly
rentals and arriving at an acceptable average.
GROSS LEASE - A lease of
property under which the lessee pays a fixed
rent, and the lessor pays the taxes, insurance,
and other charges regularly incurred through
ownership.
GUARDIAN - One who is given
the lawful custody and care of another(called a
ward).
- H -
HABENDUM CLAUSE - That part
of the deed beginning with the words "to have
and to hold," following the granting clause and
reaffirming the extent of ownership that the
grantor is transferring.
HABITABLE - Being fit to
live in. The residential landlord has an
obligation to keep the leased premises in a
habitable condition.
HEIR - A person who inherits
under a will or a person who succeeds to
property by the laws of descent if the decedent
dies without a will (intestate).
HIGHEST AND BEST USE - That
use which, at the time of appraising the
property, is most likely to produce the greatest
net return to the land and/or the building over
a given period of time.
HIGH RISE - A popular
expression for a condominium or apartment
building generally higher than six stories.
HOLD HARMLESS CLAUSE - A
clause inserted in a contract whereby one party
agrees to indemnify and protect the other party
from any injuries or lawsuits arising out of the
particular transaction.
HOLDOVER TENANT - One who
stays on the leased premises after his lease has
expired. The landlord normally has the choice of
evicting the holdover tenant or permitting him
to remain and continue to pay rent.
HOMEOWNER'S ASSOCIATION - A
non-profit association of homeowners organized
pursuant to a declaration of restrictions or
protective covenants for a subdivision, a PUD,
or a condominium.
HOMESTEAD - A home which is
used as a personal residence.
HOTEL - A building or group
of attached or detached buildings containing
dwelling or lodging units in which 50 percent or
more of the units are lodging units, usually
distinguished by a front desk, dining and other
common facilities.
HOUSE RULES - Rules of
conduct adopted by a board of directors of a
condominium and designed to promote harmonious
living among the owners and occupants.
HUD - A federal cabinet
department officially known as the Department of
Housing and Urban Development.
HYPOTHECATE - To pledge
specific real or personal property as security
for an obligation, without surrendering
possession of it.
- I -
IMPLIED
WARRANTY OF HABITABILITY - A legal
doctrine imposing on the landlord a duty to make
the leased premises acceptable to live in and
ready for occupancy and to continue to maintain
them in a state of repair throughout the entire
term of the lease.
IMPOUND ACCOUNT - A trust
account established to set aside funds for
future needs.
IMPROVED LAND - Real
property whose value has been enhanced by the
addition of on-site and off-site improvements
such as roads, sewers, utilities, buildings,
etc.; as distinguished from raw land.
IMPROVEMENTS - Valuable
additions made to property, amounting to more
than repairs, costing labor and capital and
intended to enhance the value of the property.
Improvements of land would include grading,
sidewalks, sewers, streets, utilities, etc.
Improvements on land would include buildings,
fences, and the like.
IMPUTED INTEREST - Interest
implied by the federal tax law.
INCOME APPROACH - An
approach to the valuation or appraisal of real
property as determined by the amount of net
income the property will produce over its
remaining economic life.
INCOME PROPERTY - Property
purchased primarily for the income to be derived
plus certain tax benefits, such as accelerated
depreciation. Income property can be commercial,
industrial or residential.
INCORPOREAL RIGHTS -
Intangible or non-possessory rights in real
property such as easements, licenses, profits
and the like.
INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR - One
who is retained to perform a certain act, but
who is subject to the control and direction of
another only as to the end result and not as how
he performs the act. The critical feature, and
what distinguishes an independent contractor and
an employee or agent, is the right to control.
INDUSTRIAL PARK - An area
zoned industrial and containing sites for many
separate industries and developed and managed as
a unit, usually with provisions for common
services for the users.
INJUNCTION - A legal action
which forbids a party defendant from doing some
act; it requires a person to whom it is directed
to refrain from doing a particular thing.
INNOCENT PURCHASER FOR VALUE
- One who purchases real property
without notice, actual or constructive, of any
superior rights or interests in the real
property.
INSPECTION - A visit to and
review of the premises. A prudent purchaser of
property always inspects the premises before
closing.
INSTITUTIONAL LENDER -
Financial institutions such as banks, insurance
companies, savings and loans or any lending
institution whose loans are regulated by law.
INTEREST - The sum paid or
accrued in return for the use of money.
INTERIM FINANCING - A
short-term loan usually made during the
construction phase of a building project; often
referred to as the "construction loan."
INTESTATE - To die without a
valid will.
INVENTORY - An itemized list
of property. Many brokers recommend that their
clients attach to the sales contract an
inventory of property to be included in the sale
of a residential property, including a
condominium dwelling.
INVERSE CONDEMNATION - An
action for "just compensation "brought by one
whose property has been effectively "taken" or
substantially interfered with or taken without
just compensation
- J -
JOINT AND SEVERAL
LIABILITY - A situation in which more
than one party is liable to repay a debt or
obligation and a creditor can obtain
compensation from one or more parties, either
individually or jointly, whichever he chooses.
JOINT TENANCY - A form of
property ownership by two or more persons in
which the joint tenants have one and the same
interest, arising by one and the same
conveyance, commencing atone and the same time
and held by one and the same possession(the
concept of "four unities").
JOINT VENTURE - The joining
of two or more people in a specific business
enterprise such as the development of a
condominium project or a shopping center.
JUDGMENT LIEN - A lien
binding on all the real estate of a
judgment-debtor and giving the holder of the
judgment a right to levy (i.e. to seize) the
land for satisfaction of the judgment.
JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE - A
method of foreclosing upon real property by
means of a court supervised sale. After an
appraisal, the court determines an upset price
below which no bids to purchase will be
accepted.
JUNIOR MORTGAGE - A mortgage
which is subordinate in right or lien priority
to an existing mortgage on the same realty, such
as a second mortgage.
JURISDICTION - The authority
or power to act, such as the authority of a
court to hear and render a decision that binds
both parties.
JUST COMPENSATION - An
amount of compensation to be received by a party
for the taking of property under the power of
eminent domain.
- K -
- L -
\
LAND -
The surface of the earth extending down to the
center and upward to the sky, including all
natural things thereon such as trees, crops, or
water; plus the minerals below the surface and
the air rights above.
LAND CONTRACT - Another name
for an installment purchase contract, by which
the buyer obtains equitable title (the right to
use the property) while the seller retains legal
title (recorded title)as security for payment of
the balance of the purchase price.
LAND DESCRIPTION - A
description of a particular piece of real
property.
LAND LEASEBACK - A creative
financing device often used with raw land which
a developer wants to improve, in which the
developer sells the land to an investor who
leases the land back to the developer under a
long-term net lease and subordinates his fee
ownership to the lender providing development
financing.
LAND, TENEMENTS AND HEREDITAMENTS
- A feudal phrase used to describe all
types of immovable realty including the land,
buildings and all appurtenant rights thereto.
LAND TRUST - An association
organized by common owners of real property,
which holds title to the real property in the
name of one or more trustees for the benefit of
the owners, whose beneficial interests may be
represented by trust certificates.
LANDLOCKED - Real property
having no access to a public road or way.
LANDLORD - The lessor or the
owner of leased premises. The landlord retains a
reversion interest in the property so that when
the lease ends the property will revert to the
landlord.
LANDMARK - A stake, stream,
cliff, monument or other object or feature which
is used to fix or define land boundaries; also a
prominent feature of a landscape or property
that is the symbol for the place.
LANDSCAPING - Shrubs,
bushes, trees and the like, on the grounds
surrounding a structure.
LATERAL AND SUBJACENT SUPPORT
- The support received by a parcel of
real property from the land adjoining it is
called lateral support. Subjacent support is
that support which the surface of the earth
receives from its underlying strata.
LAW DAY - The date an
obligation becomes due; sometimes refers to the
closing date.
LEASE - A lease is both a
contract between lessor (landlord)and lessee
(tenant) and a conveyance or demise of the
premises by the lessor to the lessee. A lease is
a contract in that item bodies the agreement
between the parties.
LEASEHOLD - A
less-than-freehold estate which a tenant
possesses in real property.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION - A
description which is complete enough that an
independent surveyor could locate and identify a
specific piece of real property.
LEGAL NOTICE - That notice
which is either implied or required by law.
Constructive notice under the recording laws is
also referred to as legal notice.
LEGAL RATE OF INTEREST - The
maximum interest rate permitted bylaw, with
anything above that rate being usury.
LESSEE - The person to whom
property is rented or leased; called a "tenant"
in most residential leases.
LESSOR - The person who
rents or leases property to another. In
residential leasing, the lessor is often
referred to as a landlord.
LESS-THAN-FREEHOLD ESTATE -
An estate held by one who rents or leases
property. This classification includes an estate
for years, periodic tenancy, estate at will, and
estate at sufferance.
LETTER OF CREDIT - An
agreement or commitment by a bank("issuer") made
at the request of a customer ("account
party")that the bank will honor drafts or other
demands of payment from third parties
("beneficiaries") upon compliance with the
conditions specified in the letter of credit.
LETTER OF INTENT - An
expression of intent to invest, develop or
purchase without creating any firm legal
obligation to do so.
LEVEL PAYMENT MORTGAGE - A
mortgage which is scheduled to be repaid in
equal periodic payments which include both
principal and interest.
LEVERAGE - The use of
borrowed funds to purchase investment property
with the anticipation that the property acquired
will increase in return so that the investor
will realize a profit not only on his own
investment, but also on the borrowed funds; the
employment of a smaller investment to generate a
larger rate of return through borrowing.
LICENSEE - A person who has
a valid license. A real estate licensee can be a
salesperson or a broker, active or inactive, an
individual, a corporation, or a partnership.
LIEN - A charge or claim
which one person (lienor) has upon the property
of another (lienee) as security for a debt or
obligation. Liens can be created by agreement of
the parties(mortgage) or by operation of law
(tax liens).
LIFE ESTATE - Any estate in
real or personal property which is limited in
duration to the life of its owner or the life of
some other designated person.
LIMITED COMMON ELEMENTS -
That special class of common elements in a
condominium reserved for the use of a certain
apartment(s) to the exclusion of other
apartments.
LIMITED PARTNERSHIP - A
partnership formed by two or more persons having
as members one or more general partners and one
or more limited partners.
LINE OF CREDIT - A maximum
amount of money a bank will lend one of its more
reliable and credit worthy customers without
need for any formal loan submission.
LIQUIDATED DAMAGES - An
amount predetermined by the parties to an
agreement as the total amount of compensation an
injured party should receive in the event the
other party breaches a specified part of the
contract.
LIQUIDITY - The ability to
sell an asset and convert it into cash at a
price close to its true value.
LIS PENDENS - A legal
document recorded in the Bureau of Conveyances,
which gives constructive notice that an action
has been filed in either a state or federal
court affecting a particular piece of property.
"Lis Pendens" is a Latin term which means
"action pending" and is in the nature of a
quasi-lien.
LISTING - A written
employment agreement between a property owner
and a broker authorizing the broker to find a
buyer or a tenant for a certain real property.
LITTORAL LAND - Land
bordering on the shore of a sea or ocean and
thus affected by the tide currents.
LOAN COMMITMENT - A
commitment by a lender of the amount he will
loan to a qualified borrower on a particular
piece of real estate for a specified amount of
time under specific terms.
LOAN-TO-VALUE
RATIO - The ratio that the amount of
the loan bears to the appraised value of the
property or the sales price, whichever is lower.
LOCUS SIGILLI - Latin for
"under seal", used in the abbreviated form,
"L.S.," at the end of signature line in some
formal legal documents; used instead of the
actual seal.
LOSS PAYEE - The person
designated on an insurance policy to be paid in
case the insured property is damaged or
destroyed.
- M -
MAINTENANCE -
The care and work put into a building to keep it
in operation and productive use; the general
repair and upkeep of a building. If maintenance
is deferred, the building will suffer a loss in
value.
MALL - A landscaped public
area set aside for pedestrian traffic.
MARGINAL LAND - Land which
is of little value because of some deficiency,
such as poor access, lack of adequate rainfall,
or steep terrain.
MARKETABLE TITLE - Good or
clear title reasonably free from risk of
litigation over possible defects; also referred
to as merchantable title. Marketable title need
not, however, be perfect title.
MARKET VALUE - The highest
price, estimated in terms of money, which a
property will bring if exposed for sale in the
open market, allowing a reasonable time to find
a purchaser who buys with knowledge of all the
uses to which the property is adapted and for
which it is capable of being used.
MASTER PLAN - A
comprehensive plan to guide the long-term
physical development of a particular area.
MEANDER LINE - An artificial
line used by the surveyors to measure the
natural, uneven, winding property line formed by
rivers, streams and other watercourses bordering
a property.
MECHANIC'S LIEN - A
statutory lien created in favor of materialmen
and mechanics to secure payment for materials
supplied and services rendered in the
improvement, repair or maintenance of real
property.
METES AND BOUNDS - A common
method of land description that identifies a
property by specifying the shape and boundary
dimensions of the parcel, using terminal points
and angles.
MILITARY CLAUSE - A clause
inserted in some residential leases to allow the
military tenant to terminate the lease in case
of transfer, discharge or other circumstances
making termination appropriate.
MINERAL RIGHTS - Rights to
subsurface land and profits. Normally, when real
property is conveyed, the grantee receives all
right and title to the land including everything
above and below the surface, unless excepted by
the grantor.
MISREPRESENTATION - A false
statement or concealment of a material fact made
with the intent to induce some action by another
party.
MONEY - The cash deposit
(including initial and additional deposits) paid
by the prospective buyer of real property as
evidence of his good faith intention to complete
the transaction; called hand money or a binder
in some states.
MONTH-TO-MONTH TENANCY - A
periodic tenancy where the tenant rents for one
month at a time. In the absence of rental
agreement (oral or written), a tenancy is deemed
to be month-to-month, or in the case of
boarders, week-to-week.
MONUMENTS - Visible markers,
both natural and artificial objects, which are
used to establish the lines and boundaries of a
survey.
MORTGAGE - A legal document
used to secure the performance of an obligation.
In effect, the mortgage states that the lender
can look to the property in the event the
borrower defaults in payment of the note.
MORTGAGE BANKER - A
corporation or firm which normally provides its
own funds for mortgage financing.
MORTGAGE BROKER - A person
or firm which acts as an intermediary between
borrower and lender; one who, for compensation
or gain, negotiates, sells or arranges loans and
sometimes continues to service the loans.
MORTGAGEE - The one who
receives and holds a mortgage as security for a
debt; the lender; a lender or creditor who holds
a mortgage as security for payment of an
obligation.
MORTGAGOR - The one who
gives a mortgage as security for a debt; the
borrower; usually the landowner; the borrower or
debtor who hypothecates or puts up his property
as security for an obligation.
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE (MLS)
- An organization created by Realtors
to facilitate the sharing of listings among
member brokers.
- N -
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF
REALTORS - Formerly known as the
National Association of Real Estate Boards
(NAREB), it is the largest and most prestigious
real estate organization in the world.
NEGATIVE CASH FLOW - The
investment situation where cash expenditures to
maintain an investment (taxes, mortgage
payments, maintenance, etc.) exceed the cash
income received from the investment.
NEGOTIABLE INSTRUMENT - Any
written instrument which may be transferred by
endorsement or delivery so as to vest legal
title in the transferee.
NEGOTIATION - The
transaction of business aimed at reaching a
meeting of minds among the parties; bargaining.
NET INCOME - The sum arrived
at after deducting from gross income the
expenses of a business or investment, including
taxes and insurance, and allowances for vacancy
and bad debts; what the property will earn in a
given year's operation.
NET LEASE - A lease, usually
commercial, whereby the lessee pays not only the
rent for occupancy, but also pays maintenance
and operating expenses such as tax, insurance,
utilities and repairs. Thus the rent paid is
"net" to the lessor.
NET WORTH - The value
remaining after deducting liabilities from
assets.
NOMINAL CONSIDERATION - A
consideration bearing no relation to the real
value of the contract. A deed often recites a
nominal consideration, such as "ten dollars and
other valuable consideration."
NON-COMPETITION CLAUSE - A
provision in a contract or lease prohibiting a
person from operating or controlling a nearby
business which would compete with one of the
parties to the contract.
NONCONFORMING USE - A
permitted use which was lawfully established and
maintained but which no longer conforms to the
current use regulations because of a change in
the zoning.
NONDISTURBANCE CLAUSE - A
clause inserted in a mortgage whereby the
mortgagee agrees not to terminate the tenancies
of lessees who pay their rent if the mortgagee
forecloses on the mortgagor-lessor's building.
NORMAL WEAR AND TEAR - That
physical deterioration which occurs in the
normal course of the use for which a property is
intended, without negligence, carelessness,
accident or abuse of the premises (or equipment
or chattels) by the occupant, members of
household, or their invitees or guests.
NOTE - A document signed by
the borrower of a loan, stating the loan amount,
the interest rate, the time and method of
repayment and the obligation to repay. The note
is the evidence of the debt. When secured by a
mortgage, it is called a mortgage note.
NOTICE - (1) Legal notice is
notice which is required to be made by law, or
notice which is imparted by operation of law as
a result of the possession of property or the
recording of documents. (2) Notice which is
required by contract, for example, when the
parties agree to terminate a contract by the
written notice of either party 30 days prior to
termination.
NOTICE OF COMPLETION -
Document filed to give public notice that a
construction job has been completed and that
mechanics' liens must be filed within ,say, 45
days to be valid.
NOTICE OF DEFAULT - A notice
to a defaulting party that there has been a
default, usually providing a grace period in
which to cure the default.
NOTICE OF NONRESPONSIBILITY
- A legal notice designed to relieve a
property owner from responsibility for the cost
of improvements ordered by another person.
NOTICE TO QUIT - A written
notice given by a landlord to his tenant,
stating that the landlord intends to regain
possession of the leased premises and that the
tenant is required to quit and remove himself
from the premises either at the end of the lease
term or immediately if there is a breach of
lease or if the tenancy is at will or by
sufferance; sometimes refers to the notice given
by the tenant to the landlord that he intends to
give up possession on a stated day.
NOVATION - The substitution
of a new obligation for an old one; substitution
of new parties to an existing obligation, as
where the parties to an agreement accept a new
debtor in place of an old one.
NUISANCE - Conduct or
activity which results in an actual physical
interference with another person's reasonable
use or enjoyment of his property for any lawful
purpose.
NULL & VOID - Having no
legal force or effect; of no worth;
unenforceable; not binding.
- O -
OBSOLESCENCE - A type of
depreciation of property.
OFFER - A promise by one
party to act or perform in a specified manner
provided the other party will act or perform in
the manner requested.
OFFER AND ACCEPTANCE - The
two components of a valid contract; a "meeting
of the minds."
OFFICE EXCLUSIVE - A listing
in which the seller refuses to submit the
listing to Multiple Listing Service, even after
being informed of the advantages of MLS, and
signs a certification to that effect.
OFFSITE COSTS - Costs such
as for sewers, streets, utilities, etc., which
are incurred in the development of raw land, but
are not connected with the actual construction
of the buildings(onsite costs).
OPEN-END MORTGAGE - A
mortgage in which the borrower is given a limit
up to which he may borrow, with any incremental
advances of money up to but not exceeding the
original borrowing limit to be secured by the
same mortgage.
OPEN HOUSE - The common real
estate practice of showing a listed home to the
public during established hours, frequently on
Sunday afternoons.
OPEN LISTING - A listing
given to any number of brokers. The first broker
who secures a buyer ready, willing and able to
purchase at the terms of the listing is the one
who earns the commission.
OPEN SPACE - Certain portion
of the landscape which has not been built upon
and which is sought either to be reserved in its
natural state or used for agricultural or
recreational purposes(such as parks, squares,
and the like).
OPERATING EXPENSES - Those
periodic and necessary expenses which are
essential to the continuous operation and
maintenance of a property.
OPINION OF TITLE - An
opinion by a person competent in examining
titles, usually a title attorney, as to the
status of the title of a property.
OPTION - An agreement to
keep open, over a set period, an offer to sell
or purchase property.
ORIGINATION FEE - The
finance fee charged by a lender for placing a
mortgage, which covers initial costs such as
preparation of documents and credit, inspection
and appraisal fees.
OVERIMPROVEMENT - An
improvement which by reason of excess size or
cost is not the highest and best use for the
site on which it is placed.
OVERRIDE - A commission paid
to managerial personnel (e.g. principal broker)
on sales made by their subordinates, usually
calculated as a percentage of the gross sales
commissions earned by the salesperson.
- P -
PACKAGE MORTGAGE - A method
of financing in which the loan that finances the
purchase of a home also finances the purchase of
personal items such as a washer and dryer,
refrigerator, stove and other specified
appliances.
PARCEL - A specific portion
of a larger tract; a lot.
PARTIAL RELEASE - A clause
found in a mortgage which directs the mortgagee
to release certain parcels from the lien of the
blanket mortgage upon the payment of a certain
sum of money.
PARTICIPATION MORTGAGE - A
mortgage in which the lender participates in the
income of the mortgaged venture beyond a fixed
return, or receives a yield on the loan in
addition to the straight interest rate.
PARTITION - The dividing of
common interests in real property owned jointly
by two or more persons.
PARTNERSHIP - "An
association of two or more persons to carry on
as co-owners a business for profit," as defined
in the Uniform Partnership Act, which is in
force in a majority of the states.
PARTY WALL - A wall which is
located on or at a boundary line between two
adjoining parcels and is used or is intended to
be used by the owners of both properties in the
construction or maintenance of improvements on
their respective lots.
PENTHOUSE - An apartment
located on the roof of a building, or more
commonly, an apartment on the top floor of a
building.
PERCENTAGE LEASE - A lease
whose rental is based on a percentage of the
monthly or annual gross sales made on the
premises.
PERCOLATION TEST - A
hydraulic engineer's test of soil to determine
the ability of the ground to absorb and drain
water.
PERFORMANCE BOND - A bond,
usually posted by one who is to perform work for
another, which assures that a project or
undertaking will be completed as per agreement
or contract.
PERIODIC TENANCY - A
leasehold estate which continues from period to
period, such as month to month, year to year.
All conditions and terms of the tenancy are
carried over from period to period, and continue
for an uncertain time until proper notice of
termination is given.
PERMANENT FINANCING - A
long-term loan, as opposed to an interim loan.
PERSONAL PROPERTY - Things
which are tangible and moveable; property which
is not classified as real property; chattels;
personalty.
PIGGYBACK LOAN - A joint
loan with two lenders sharing a single mortgage.
PLANNED UNIT DEVELOPMENT (PUD)
- A modern concept in housing designed
to produce a high density of dwellings and
maximum utilization of open spaces.
PLAT - A map or a town,
section, or subdivision indicating the location
and boundaries of individual properties.
PLOTTAGE - The merging or
consolidating of adjacent lots into one larger
lot, with the consequent result of improved
usability and increased value; also called
assemblage.
POCKET LISTING - A listing
which is retained by the listing broker or
salesperson, who does not make it available to
other brokers in the office or to other Multiple
Listing Service members.
POINT OF BEGINNING - The
starting point in a metes and bounds description
of property, which is usually a street
intersection or a specific monument.
POINTS - A generic term for
a percentage of the principal loan amount which
the lender charges for making the loan; each
point is equal to one percent of the loan
amount.
POLICE POWER - The
constitutional authority and inherent power of a
state to adopt and enforce laws and regulations
to promote and support the public health,
safety, morals and general welfare.
PORTE COCHERE - A roofed
structure extending from the entrance of a
building over an adjacent driveway to shelter
those getting into or out of vehicles.
POSSESSION - The act of
either actually or constructively possessing or
occupying property.
POWER OF ATTORNEY - A
written instrument authorizing a person(the
attorney-in-fact) to act as the agent on behalf
of another to the extent indicated in the
instrument.
POWER OF SALE - A clause
written into a mortgage authorizing the
mortgagee to sell the property in the event of
default.
PREMISES - The subject
property, such as the property which is deeded
or the unit that is leased.
PREPAID INTEREST - The
paying of interest before it is due.
PREPAYMENT PENALTY - The
amount set by the creditor as a penalty to the
debtor for paying off the debt prior to its
maturity. The prepayment penalty is charged by
the lender to recoup a portion of interest that
he had planned to earn when he made the loan.
PREPAYMENT PRIVILEGE - The
right of the debtor to pay off part or all of
the debt without penalty prior to maturity, such
as in a mortgage or agreement of sale.
PRE-SALE - A
pre-construction sale program by a condominium
developer who is required to sell a certain
percentage of units before a lender will commit
to finance construction of the project.
PRESCRIPTION - The acquiring
of a right in property, usually in the form of
an intangible property right such as an easement
or right-of-way, by means of adverse use of
property that is continuous and uninterrupted
for the prescriptive period.
PRESENT VALUE OF ONE DOLLAR
- A doctrine which is based on the fact
that money has a time value. The present worth
of a payment to be received at some time in the
future is the amount of the payment less the
loss of interest.
PRIME RATE - The minimum
interest rate charged by a commercial bank on
short-term loans to its largest and strongest
clients(those with the highest credit
standings).
PRINCIPAL - The capital sum;
interest is paid on the principal. NOT spelled
principle.
PRINCIPAL BROKER - The
licensed broker directly in charge of and
responsible for the real estate operations
conducted by a brokerage company.
PRIVATE MORTGAGE INSURANCE -
A special form of insurance designed to permit
lenders to increase their loan-to-market-value
ratio, often up to 95 percent of the market
value of the property.
PROBATE - The formal
judicial proceeding to prove or confirm the
validity of a will. The will is presented to the
probate court, and creditors and interested
parties are notified to present their claims or
to show cause why the provisions of the will
should not be enforced by the court.
PROCURING CAUSE - That
effort which brings about the desired result, as
in producing the buyer for the listed property.
PRO FORMA STATEMENT - A
projection of future income and expenses.
PROMISSORY NOTE - An
unconditional written promise of one person to
pay a certain sum of money to another, or order,
or bearer, at a future specified time.
PROPERTY - The rights or
interests a person has in the thing owned; not,
in the technical sense, the thing itself. These
rights include the right to possess, to use, to
encumber, to transfer and to exclude, commonly
called the "bundle of rights."
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT - That
aspect of real estate devoted to the leasing,
managing, marketing and overall maintenance of
the property of others.
PROPERTY REPORT - A
disclosure document required under the federal
interstate land sales act where applicable to
the interstate sale of subdivided lots.
PROPRIETARY LEASE - A
written lease in a cooperative apartment
building, between the owner-corporation and the
tenant-stockholder, in which the tenant is given
the right to occupy a particular unit.
PRORATE - To divide or
distribute proportionately.
PROSPECT - A person or
corporation who may be interested in buying or
selling real property. The prospect does not
become a client until the parties establish a
fiduciary relationship, such as upon signing a
listing contract or upon executing a DROA.
PROSPECTUS - A printed
statement distributed to describe, advertise and
give advance information on a business, venture,
project or stock issue.
PUFFING - Exaggerated or
superlative comments or opinions not made as
representations of fact and thus not a grounds
for misrepresentation. A statement such as "the
apartment has a fantastic view," is puffing
because the prospective buyer can clearly assess
the view in each case.
PUNCH LIST - A discrepancy
list showing defects in construction which need
some corrective work to bring the building up to
standards set by the plans and specifications.
PURCHASE MONEY MORTGAGE - A
mortgage given to the seller as part of the
buyer's consideration for the purchase of real
property, and delivered at the same time that
the real property is transferred as a
simultaneous part of the transaction.
- Q -
QUALIFIED FEE - An estate
in fee which is subject to certain limitations
imposed by the owner.
QUANTITY SURVEY - A method
of estimating construction cost or reproduction
cost; a highly technical process used in
arriving at the cost estimate of new
construction and sometimes referred to in the
building trade as the price take-off method.
QUIET ENJOYMENT - The right
of a new owner or a lessee legally in possession
to uninterrupted use of the property without
interference from the former owner, lessor or
any third party claiming superior title.
QUIET TITLE ACTION - A
circuit court action intended to establish or
settle the title to a particular property,
especially where there is a cloud on the title.
QUITCLAIM DEED - A deed of
conveyance which operates, in effect, as a
release of whatever interest the grantor has in
the property; sometimes called a release deed.
- R -
RANGE - A measurement, used
in the government survey system, consisting of a
strip of land six miles wide, running in a
north-south direction.
RATE OF RETURN - The
relationship (expressed as a percentage)between
the annual net income generated by a business
and the invested capital, or the appraised
value, or the gross income, etc., of the
business.
RAW LAND - Unimproved land;
land in its unused natural state prior to the
construction of improvements such as streets,
lighting, sewers, and the like.
REAL ESTATE - The physical
land and appurtenances, including any
structures; for all practical purposes
synonymous with real property.
REAL PROPERTY - All land and
appurtenances to land, including buildings,
structures, fixtures, fences, and improvements
erected upon or affixed to the same; excluding,
however, growing crops.
REALTOR - A registered word
which may only be used by an active real estate
broker who is a member of the state and local
real estate board affiliated with the National
Association of Realtors. The use of the name
REALTOR and the distinctive seal in advertising
is strictly governed by the rules and
regulations of the National Association.
REALTY - Land and everything
permanently affixed thereto.
REBATE - A reduction or
kickback of a stipulated charge.
RECAPTURE CLAUSE - A clause
usually found in percentage leases, especially
in shopping center leases, giving the landlord
the right to terminate the lease (and thus
"recapture" the premises)if the tenant does not
maintain a specified minimum amount of business.
RECEIVER - An independent
party appointed by a court to impartially
receive, preserve and manage property which is
involved in litigation, pending final
disposition of the matter before the court.
RECORDING - The act of
entering into the book of public records the
written instruments affecting the title to real
property, such as deeds, mortgages, contracts of
sale, options, assignments, and the like. Proper
recordation imparts constructive notice to all
the world of the existence of the recorded
document and its contents.
REDEMPTION, EQUITABLE RIGHT OF
- The right of a mortgagor who has
defaulted on the mortgage note to redeem or get
back his title to the property by paying off the
entire mortgage note prior to the foreclosure
sale.
REDUCTION CERTIFICATE - An
instrument which shows the amount of the unpaid
balance of a mortgage, the rate of interest and
the date of maturity.
REFINANCE - The act of
obtaining a new loan to pay off an existing
loan; the process of paying off one loan with
the proceeds from another.
REFORMATION - A legal action
to correct or modify a contract or deed which
has not accurately reflected the intentions of
the parties due to some mechanical error, such
as a typo graphical error in the legal
description.
RELEASE - The discharge or
relinquishment of a right, claim or privilege.
Releases involving real property transactions
should be acknowledged and recorded.
RELEASE CLAUSE - A provision
found in many blanket mortgages enabling the
mortgagor to obtain partial releases of specific
parcels from the mortgage upon the payment of,
typically, a larger-than-pro-rata portion of the
loan.
REMAINDER ESTATE - A future
interest in real estate created at the same time
and by the same instrument as another estate,
and limited to arise immediately upon the
termination of the prior estate.
RENEWAL OPTION - A covenant
in some leases which gives the lessee the right
to extend the lease term for a certain period,
on specified terms.
RENT - Fixed periodic
payment made by a tenant or occupant of property
to the owner for the possession and use thereof,
usually by prior agreement of the parties.
RENT CONTROL - Regulation by
state or local governmental agencies restricting
the amount of rent landlords can charge their
tenants; such regulation is a valid exercise of
the state's police power.
RENTAL AGREEMENT - An
agreement, written or oral, which establishes or
modifies the terms, conditions, rules,
regulations, or any other provisions concerning
the use and occupancy of a dwelling unit and
premises; a lease on residential property.
RENTAL POOL - A rental
arrangement whereby participating owners of
rental apartments agree to have their apartment
units available for rental as determined by the
rental agent, and then share in the profits and
losses of all the rental apartments in the pool
according to an agreed formula.
REPRODUCTION COST - The
cost, on the basis of current prices, of
reproducing a new replica property with the same
or fairly similar material.
RESCISSION - The legal
remedy of canceling, terminating or annulling a
contract and restoring the parties to their
original positions; a return to the status quo.
RESERVE FUND - Monies set
aside as a cushion of capital for future payment
of items such as taxes, insurance, furniture
replacement, deferred maintenance, etc.;
sometimes referred to as an impound account.
RESIDUAL PROCESS - An
appraisal process used in the income approach to
estimate the value of the land and/or the
building, as indicated by the capitalization of
the residual net income attributable to it.
RESTRICTIONS - Limitations
on the use of property. Private restrictions are
created by means of restrictive covenants
written into real property instruments, such as
deeds and leases.
RESTRICTIVE COVENANT - A
private agreement, usually contained in a deed,
which restricts the use and occupancy of real
property.
RETALIATORY EVICTION - An
act whereby a landlord evicts the tenant in
response to some complaint made by the tenant.
REVERSION - A future estate
in real property created by operation of law
when a grantor conveys a lesser estate than he
has. The residue left in the grantor is called a
reversion which commences in possession in the
future upon the end of a particular estate
granted or devised, whether it be freehold or
less-than-freehold.
RIGHT OF SURVIVORSHIP - The
distinctive characteristic of a joint tenancy
(also tenancy by entirety) by which the
surviving joint tenant(s) succeeds to all right,
title and interest of the deceased joint tenant
without the need for probate proceedings.
RIGHT-OF-WAY - The right or
privilege, acquired through accepted usage or by
contract, to pass over a designated portion of
the property of another.
RIPARIAN - Those rights and
obligations which are incidental to ownership of
land adjacent to or abutting on watercourses
such as streams and lakes.
RISK OF LOSS -
Responsibility for damages caused to
improvements. The risk of loss passes to the
vendee when either title or possession passes,
and he should protect himself by securing proper
insurance.
RUNNING WITH THE LAND -
Rights or covenants which bind or benefit
successive owners of a property are said to run
with the land, such as restrictive building
covenants in a recorded deed which would affect
all future owners of the property.
- S -
SALE AND LEASEBACK - A
transaction in which, typically, an owner sells
his improved property and as part of the same
transaction signs a long-term lease and remains
in possession.
SCHEMATICS - Preliminary
architectural drawings and sketches; basic
layouts not containing the final details of
design.
SECOND MORTGAGE - A mortgage
which is junior or subordinate to a first
mortgage; typically, an additional loan imposed
on top of the first mortgage, which is taken out
when the borrower needs more money.
SECONDARY MORTGAGE MARKET -
A market for the purchase and sale of existing
mortgages, designed to provide greater liquidity
for mortgages; also called secondary money
market.
SECURITY AGREEMENT - A
security document which creates a lien upon
chattels, including chattels intended to be
affixed to land as fixtures; known as a chattel
mortgage prior to the adoption of the Uniform
Commercial Code.
SECURITY DEPOSIT - Money
deposited by or for the tenant with the
landlord, to be held by the landlord for the
following purposes: to remedy tenant defaults
for damage to the premises (be it accidental or
intentional), for failure to pay rent due, or
for failure to return all keys at the end of the
tenancy.
SEPTIC TANK - A sewage
settling tank in which part of the sewage is
converted into gas and liquids before the
remaining waste is discharged by gravity into a
leaching bed underground.
SETBACK - Zoning
restrictions on the amount of land required
surrounding improvements; the amount of space
required between the lot line and the building
line.
SETTLEMENT - The act of
adjusting and prorating the various credits,
charges and settlement costs to conclude a real
estate transaction.
SEVERALTY - Sole ownership
of real property.
SHELL LEASE - A lease
wherein a tenant leases the unfinished shell of
a building, as in a new shopping center, and
agrees to complete construction himself by
installing ceilings, plumbing, heating and air
conditioning systems, and electrical wiring.
SHOPPING CENTER - A modern
classification of retail stores, characterized
by off-street parking and clusters of stores,
subject to a uniform development plan, and
usually with careful analysis given to the
proper merchant mix.
SHORELINE - The dividing
line between private land and public beach on
beachfront property.
SIMPLE INTEREST - Interest
computed on the principal balance only.
SPECIAL ASSESSMENT - A tax
or levy customarily imposed against only those
specific parcels of realty which will benefit
from a proposed public improvement, as opposed
to a general tax on the entire community.
SPECIAL WARRANTY DEED - A
deed in which the grantor warrants or guarantees
the title only against defects arising during
the period of his tenure and ownership of the
property and not against defects existing before
the time of his ownership.
SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE - A
legal action brought in a court of equity to
compel a party to carry out the terms of a
contract.
SPOT LOAN - A loan on a
particular property, usually a condominium unit,
by a lender who has not previously financed that
particular condominium building.
STANDING LOAN - A commitment
by the interim or construction lender to keep
the money already funded in the project for a
specified period of time after the expiration of
the interim loan, usually until permanent
take-out financing is secured.
STATUTE OF FRAUDS - That law
which requires certain contracts to be in
writing and signed by the party to be charged
therewith in order to be legally enforceable.
STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS -
That law pertaining to the period of time within
which certain actions must be brought to court.
STEP-UP LEASE - A lease with
fixed rent for an initial term and provision for
pre-determined rent increases at specified
intervals and/or increases based upon periodic
appraisals; sometimes called a graduated lease.
STRAIGHT NOTE - A promissory
note evidencing a loan in which "interest only"
payments are made periodically during the term
of the note, with the principal payment due in
one lump sum upon maturity.
SUBJECT TO MORTGAGE - A
grantee taking title to real property "subject
to mortgage" is not personally liable to the
mortgagee for payment of the mortgage note. In
the event the grantor-mortgagor defaults in
paying the note, the grantee could, however,
lose property, and thus his equity, in a
foreclosure sale.
SUBORDINATION AGREEMENT - An
agreement whereby a prior mortgagee agrees to
subordinate or give up their priority position
to an existing or anticipated future lien.
SUMMARY POSSESSION - A legal
process used by a landlord to regain possession
of the leased premises if the tenant has
breached the lease or is holding over after the
termination of tenancy.
SURRENDER - A premature
conveyance of a possessory estate to a person
having a future interest, as when a lessee
surrenders the leasehold interest to the owner
of the reversion interest, the lessor, before
the normal expiration of the lease.
SURVEY - The process by
which boundaries are measured and land areas are
determined; the on-site measurement of lot
lines, dimensions, and position of houses in a
lot including the determination of any existing
encroachments or easements.
SURVIVORSHIP - The right of
survivorship is that special feature of a joint
tenancy whereby all title, right and interest of
a decedent joint tenant in certain property
passes to the surviving joint tenants by
operation of law, free from claims of heirs and
creditors of the decedent.
- T -
TAKE-OUT
FINANCING - Long-term permanent
financing.
TAX LIEN - A general
statutory lien imposed against real property for
failure to pay taxes. There are federal tax
liens and state tax liens.
TAX SHELTER - A phrase often
used to describe some of the tax advantages of
real estate investment, such as deductions for
depreciation, interest, taxes, etc., which may
offset the investor's other ordinary income to
reduce the investor's overall tax payment.
TENANCY AT SUFFERANCE - A
tenancy which exists when a tenant wrongfully
holds over after the expiration of a lease,
without the landlord's consent, as where the
tenant fails to surrender possession after
termination of the lease.
TENANCY AT WILL - A tenancy
in which a person is in possession of real
estate with the permission of the owner, for a
term of unspecified or uncertain duration, as
when an owner permits a tenant to occupy a
property until it is sold.
TENANCY BY THE ENTIRETY - A
special joint tenancy between a lawfully married
husband and wife, which places all title to the
property into the marital unit, with both
spouses having an equal, undivided interest in
the whole property.
TENANCY FOR YEARS - A
less-than-freehold estate in which the property
is leased for a definite, fixed period of time,
be it for 60 days or any fraction of a year, a
year, ten years, etc.
TENANCY IN COMMON - A form
of concurrent ownership of property between two
or more persons, in which each has an undivided
interest in the whole property; frequently found
when the parties acquire title by descent or by
will.
TENANCY IN SEVERALTY -
Ownership of property vested in one person
alone, and not held jointly with another; also
called Several Tenancy or Sole Tenancy.
TENANT - In general, one who
holds or possesses property, such as a life
tenant or a tenant for years; commonly used to
refer to a lessee under a lease.
TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE - The
clause in a contract which emphasizes that
punctual performance is an essential requirement
of the contract.
TIME SHARING - A modern
approach to communal ownership and use of real
estate which permits multiple purchasers to buy
undivided interests in real property (which is
usually in a resort condominium or hotel) with a
right to use the facility for a fixed or
variable time period.
TITLE INSURANCE - A
comprehensive contract of indemnity under which
the title company agrees to reimburse the
insured for any loss if title is not as
represented in the policy.
TITLE SEARCH - An
examination of the public records to determine
what, if any, defects there are in the chain of
title.
TOWNHOUSE - A type of
dwelling unit normally having two floors, with
the living area and kitchen on the base floor
and the bedrooms located on the second floor.
TOWNSHIP - A piece of
property, used in the government survey system
of land description, which is 6 miles square,
and contains36 sections, each 1 mile square; and
consists of 23,040 acres.
TRADE FIXTURES - Articles of
personal property annexed to leased premises by
the tenant, as a necessary part of the tenant's
trade or business.
TRIPLE NET LEASE - A net,
net, net lease, where in addition to the
stipulated rent, the lessee assumes payment of
all expenses associated with the operation of
the property.
TRUST DEED - A real property
security device (also called a deed of trust)
very similar to a mortgage, except that there
are three parties, the trustor, the trustee, and
the beneficiary (the lender).
TRUST FUND ACCOUNT - An
account set up by a broker at a bank or other
recognized depository, into which the broker
deposits all funds entrusted to him by his
principal or others.
TURNKEY PROJECT - A
development term meaning the complete
construction package from ground breaking to the
completion of the building. All that is left
undone is to turn over the keys to the buyer.
- U -
UNILATERAL CONTRACT - A
contract in which one party makes an obligation
to perform without receiving in return any
express promise of performance from the other
party, such as an open listing contract, where
the seller agrees to pay a commission to the
first broker who brings in a ready, willing and
able buyer.
UPSET PRICE - A minimum
price set by a court in a judicial foreclosure,
below which the property may not be sold by a
court appointed commissioner at public auction;
the minimum price which can be accepted for the
property after the court has had the property
appraised.
USEFUL LIFE - That period of
time over which an asset, such as a building, is
expected to remain economically feasible to the
owner.
USURY - Charging a rate of
interest in excess of that permitted by law.
- V -
VACANCY FACTOR - An
allowance or discount for estimated
vacancies(unrented units) in a rental project.
The vacancy rate is the ratio between the number
of vacant units and the total number of units in
a specified project or area.
VALUE - The power of a good
or service to command other goods in exchange
for the present worth of future rights to income
or amenities; the present worth to typical users
and investors of future benefits arising out of
ownership of a property.
VARIANCE - Permission
obtained from governmental zoning authorities to
build a structure or conduct a use which is
expressly prohibited by the current zoning laws;
an exception from the zoning laws.
VENDEE - The purchaser of
realty; the buyer. The buyer under an agreement
of sale.
VENDOR - The seller of
realty. The seller under an agreement of sale.
VOID - Having no legal force
or binding effect; a nullity; not enforceable. A
contract for an illegal purpose (i.e.
gambling)is void.
VOIDABLE - A contract which
appears valid and enforceable on its face, but
is subject to rescission by one of the parties
who acted under a disability, such as being a
minor or being under duress or undue influence;
that which may be avoided or adjudged void but
which is not, in itself, void.
- W -
WAIVER - To voluntarily
give up or surrender a right.
WAREHOUSE - A building used
to store merchandise and other materials or
equipment.
WAREHOUSING - A term used in
financing to describe the process which loan
correspondents employ, assembling into one
package a number of mortgage loans which the
correspondent has originated and selling them in
the secondary mortgage market.
WARRANTY - A guaranty by the
seller, covering the title as well as the
physical condition of the property.
WARRANTY DEED - A deed in
which the grantor fully warrants good clear
title to the premises. Also called a general
warranty deed.
WASTE - An improper use or
abuse of property by one in possession of land,
who holds less than the fee ownership, such as a
tenant, life tenant, mortgagor, or vendee.
WEAR AND TEAR - The gradual
physical deterioration of property, resulting
from use, passage of time and weather. Only
property subject to wear and tear is
depreciable.
WRAP-AROUND MORTGAGE - A
method of refinancing in which the new mortgage
is placed in a secondary or subordinate
position. In essence, it is an additional
mortgage in which another lender refinances a
borrower by lending an amount over the existing
first mortgage amount, without cashing out or
distributing the existence of the first
mortgage.
- X -
- Y -
YEAR-TO-YEAR TENANCY - A
periodic tenancy in which the rent is reserved
from year to year.
YIELD - The return on an
investment or the amount of profit, stated as a
percentage of the amount invested.
- Z -
ZONING - The
regulation of structures and uses of property
within designated districts or zones. Zoning
regulates and affects such things as use of the
land, types of structure permitted, building
heights, setbacks, and density (the ratio of
land area to improvement area).