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Real Estate Glossary
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- Abstract of Judgment:
- A summary of the essential provisions of a court judgment. When recorded,
an abstract of judgment creates a lien on all of the real property
of the judgment debtor in the county in which it is recorded.
- Acceleration Clause:
- Clause used in
an installment note and mortgage (or deed of trust), which gives
the lender the right to demand payment in full upon the happening
of a certain event, such as failure to pay an installment by
a certain date, change of ownership with the lender's consent,
destruction of the property, or other even which endangers the
security of the loan.
- Access Right:
- A right to ingress and
egress to and from one's property. May be express or implied.
- Acknowledgement:
- A formal declaration
made before a duly authorized officer (usually a notary public)
by a person who has executed an instrument that such execution
is his or her act and deed.
- Acre:
- A measure, usually of land, equal
to 160 sq. rods (43,560 sq. ft.) in any shape.
- Action to Quiet Title:
- A court action
to establish title to real property against adverse claims.
- Addendum:
- Something added. A
list or other material added to a document, letter, contractual
agreement, escrow instructions, etc.
- Adjustable Rate Mortgage (ARM):
- A mortgage
in which the interest rate is adjusted periodically according
to a pre-selected index. The terms, adjustment schedule,
and index to be used can vary based on the particular lender.
- Agency:
- A relationship created when
one person (the principal) delegates to another (the agent)
the right to act on his or her behalf in business transactions.
- Agent:
- The person who is acting on
behalf of the principal or client.
- Agreement of Sale:
- A written contract
between a seller and a buyer.
- Alienation Clause:
- A clause calling
for a debt under a mortgage or deed of trust to be due in its
entirety upon transfer of ownership of the property.
- Amendment:
- A change, either to correct
an error or to alter a part of an agreement without changing
the principal idea or essence.
- Amenities:
- Those settings or improvements
to property that increase the desirability or enjoyment rather
than the necessities of the residents.
- American Land Title Association (ALTA):
- A national association of title
insurance companies, abstractors, and agents.
- Amortization:
- The process of paying
off a debt in installments over a given period of time without
a final balloon payment.
- Annual Percentage Rate (APR):
- An expression
of the percentage relationship of the total finance charges
to the total amount to be financed, as required under the federal
Truth-in-Lending Act.
- Appraisal:
- An opinion of the value
of property resulting from an analysis of facts affecting market
value.
- Appreciation:
- An increased value of
property due to either a positive improvement of the area or
the elimination of negative factors. Commonly used to
describe an increase in value through inflation.
- Appurtenance:
- Something belonging to
something else, either attached or not, such as a barn to a
house, or an easement to land. The appurtenance is part
of the property and passes with it upon sale or other transfer.
- Arbitration Clause:
- A clause in a lease
or other agreement calling for the decision of a third party
(arbiter) regarding disputes based on negotiation.
- Arrears:
- Payment made after it is due
is in arrears. Interest is said to be paid in arrears
since it is paid to the date of payment rather than in advance.
- "As Is" Condition:
- Property sold in
its existing condition. Use of this term generally relieves
the seller from liability for defects in that condition.
- Assessed Valuation:
- The value that
a taxing authority places upon real or personal property for
the purpose of taxation.
- Assessment:
- The estimating of value
of property for tax purposes. A levy against property
in addition to general taxes usually for improvements such as
streets, sewers, etc.
- Assumable loan:
- A mortgage loan which
can be transferred to another borrower without a change in the
terms of the loan.
- Assumption of Mortgage:
- Agreement by
a buyer to assume the liability under an existing note secured
by a mortgage or deed of trust.
- Attorney-In-Fact:
- One who is appointed
to act (as agent) for another (principal) under a power of attorney.
The scope of the agent's authority is limited to that given
by the power of attorney, which may be limited to one specific
act or may be broader.
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| B |
- Backup Offer:
- A secondary offer to buy
property, used in case the first (primary) offer fails.
- Balloon Note:
- A note calling for periodic
payments which are insufficient to fully amortize the face amount
of the note prior to maturity, so that a principal sum known
as a "Balloon" is due at maturity.
- Balloon Payment:
- The unpaid principal
amount of a loan due on a specific date in the future. Usually
the amount that must be paid in a lump sum at the end of the
term.
- Beneficiary:
- The person who is entitled
to receive funds or property under the terms and provisions
of a will, trust, insurance policy or security instrument. In
connection with a mortgage loan the beneficiary is the lender.
- Beneficiary's Statement:
- The statement
of a lender which gives the remaining principal balance due
on a note and other information concerning the loan. It is usually
obtained in escrow when the owner wishes to sell or refinance.
- Bill of Sale:
- An instrument by which
title to personal property is transferred or conveyed.
- Binder:
- An offer issued by a title
insurance company setting forth the conditions, which, if satisfied,
will cause a policy of title insurance to be issued.
- Bona Fide Purchaser (BFP):
- One who
buys property in good faith, for fair value, and without notice
of any adverse claim or right of third parties.
- Bridge Financing:
- A form of interim
loan generally made between a short-term loan and a long-term
loan, when the borrower needs to have more time before taking
on long term financing.
- Broker:
- A person licensed to act as
an agent for another in negotiating the sale or purchase of
real property in return for a fee or commission.
- Buydown:
- A financing technique used
to reduce the monthly payment for the home buying borrower during
the initial years of ownership. Under some buydown plans, a
residential developer, builder, or the seller will make subsidy
payments (in the form of points) to the lender that "buydown,"
or lower, the effective interest rate paid by the home buyer,
thus reducing monthly payments for a set period of time.
- By-Laws:
- Rules and regulations, adopted
by an association or corporation, which govern its activities.
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- California Land Title Association (CLTA):
- A statewide association of
title insurers and underwritten title companies.
- Cap:
- A limit on how much the interest
rate or monthly payment of an ARM can change, either at each
adjustment or during the life of the mortgage. Payment
CAP's don't limit the amount of interest the lender is earning
so they may cause negative amortization.
- CC&Rs (Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions):
-
Limitations placed on the use and enjoyment of real property.
These are found most often in condominiums and planned unit
developments.
- Certificate of Eligibility:
- A certificate
obtained by a veteran from a Veterans Administration office
that states that the veteran is eligible for a V.A. insured
loan.
- Certificate of Occupancy:
- A certificate
issued by a local building department to a builder or renovator,
stating that the building is in proper condition to be occupied.
- Certificate of Reasonable Value (CRV):
- An appraisal of property for the purpose of insurance by
the Veterans Administration.
- Certified Copy:
- A true copy, attested
to be true by the officer holding the original.
- Chain of Title:
- A chronological list
of recorded instruments tracing title to land, from the original
owner to the present owner.
- Closing Costs:
- Expenses, beyond the
selling price, such as loan fees, title fees, etc. Paid when
documents are executed and/or recorded and the sale is complete.
- Closing Statement:
- A summary, in the
form of a balance sheet, showing the amounts of debits and credits
to which each party to a real estate transaction is entitled
upon closing.
- Closing:
- The process of completing
a real estate transaction during which the seller delivers title
to the buyer in exchange for payment of the purchase price.
Called a "settlement" in some areas.
- Cloud on Title:
- Any document, claim,
unreleased lien or encumbrance, which, if valid, would affect
or impair title to a property.
- Commission:
- Compensation due a real
estate broker for acting on behalf of the principal.
- Commitment:
- A written promise to make
or insure a loan for a specified amount and on specified items.
- Common Area:
- The area owned in common
by the owners of condominiums or planned unit development homes
in a subdivision.
- Community Property:
- Property acquired
during a marriage or domestic partnership by either spouse or
partner, or both, and which is not separate property or joint
tenancy.
- Comparables (comps):
- An abbreviation
for comparable properties used for comparative purposes in the
appraisal process.
- Condemnation:
- The taking of private
property for public use without the consent of the owner, but
only upon payment of just compensation.
- Condominium:
- An undivided interest
in common in a portion of real property coupled with a separate
interest in space called a unit.
- Conservator:
- A guardian, court appointed.
- Consideration:
- A required element in
all contracts by which something of value, including a promise,
is exchanged for the act or promise of another.
- Construction Loan:
- Short term financing
of real estate construction. Generally followed by the
long term financing called a "take out" loan, issued upon completion
of improvements.
- Contingency:
- Action conditioned upon
a certain event. Acceptance of the terms of a contract based
on something else happening or certain conditions being met.
- Contract of Sale:
-
Depending on area of country it may be a Land Contract or a
Purchase Agreement.
- Contract Sales Price:
- The full purchase
price as stated in the contract.
- Conventional Mortgage:
- A loan neither
insured by the FHA nor guaranteed by the VA.
- Conversion Clause:
- A provision in some
ARM’s that allows you to change the ARM to a fixed-rate loan
at some point during the term. Usually the conversion is allowed
at the end of the first adjustment period. At the time
of the conversion, the new fixed rate is generally set at one
of the rates then prevailing for fixed-rate mortgages.
The conversion feature may be available at extra cost.
- Conveyance:
- The transfer of title or
an interest in real property by means of a written instrument
such as a deed.
- Credit Report:
-
A report of an individual's credit history prepared by a credit
bureau and used by a lender in determining a loan applicant's
creditworthiness.
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| D |
- Deed of Trust:
- A security agreement
creating a lien by which title to real property is transferred
to a third-party trustee as security for an obligation owed
by the trustor (borrower) to the beneficiary (lender).
- Defective Title:
- Title to a negotiable
instrument obtained by fraud. Title to real property which
lacks some of the elements necessary to transfer good title.
- Demand:
- The lender's statement of the
amount due to payoff a loan.
- Depreciation:
- Decrease in value to
real property improvements caused by deterioration or obsolescence.
- Devise:
- Real estate left by will.
- Devisee:
- One to whom real estate is
given by will.
- Devisor:
- A testator who leaves real
estate.
- Direct Reduction Mortgage:
- An amortized
mortgage. One on which principal and interest being computed
on the remaining balance.
- Disbursements:
- Payments made during
the course of an escrow or at closing.
- Discount:
- In an ARM with an initial
discount, the lender gives up a number of percentage points
of interest to give you a lower rate and lower payments for
part of the mortgage term. After the discount period,
the ARM rate will probably go up depending on the index rate.
- Documentary Transfer Tax:
- The tax,
based on sales price, which is charged by the city and/or county
on the transfer of real property.
- Down Payment:
- The cash portion paid
by a buyer from his own funds, as opposed to that portion of
the purchase price which financed.
- Dragnet Clause:
- A clause in a mortgage
or deed or trust which places the real estate as security for
existing debts between the parties.
- Due-on-Sale-Clause:
-
See Alienation Clause.
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- Earnest Money:
-
The cash deposit paid by a prospective buyer as evidence of
good faith to bind a sale of real estate.
- Easement:
-
A limited right or interest in land of another that entitles
the holder of the right to some use, privilege or benefit over
the land.
- Egress:
- A term concerning a right to
come and go across the land (public or private) of another.
Another part of the term ingress and egress.
- Eminent Domain:
- A Government right
to acquire private property for public use by condemnation,
and the payment of just compensation.
- Encroachment:
- Construction onto the
property of another, wall, fence, etc.
- Encumbrance:
-
A claim, right or lien upon real property, held by someone other
than the owner.
- Endorsement:
-
A rider attached to an insurance policy to expand or limit coverage.
Also spelled indorsement. Also, the act of the holder
of a note, bill, check, or other negotiable instrument, of assigning
said instrument by signing the back of the instrument.
- Equity:
-
The value of a person's interest in real property after all
liens and charges have been deducted.
- Escalation Clause:
- A clause in a lease
providing for an increased rental at a future time.
- Escheat:
- A reversion of property to
the state in the absence of an individual owner. Usually
occurs when a property owner dies intestate, and without heirs.
- Escrow:
-
The process in which a disinterested third party holds money
and documents for delivery to the respective parties in a transaction
on performance of established conditions.
- Estate:
- The interest or nature of the
interest which one has in property, such as a life estate, fee
estate, leasehold estate, etc.
- Estate Tax:
- A tax against the property
of a deceased, based on the value of the estate.
- Exception:
-
A provision in a title insurance binder or policy which excludes
liability for a specified title defect or an outstanding lien
or encumbrance.
- Executor:
- One who is appointed under
a will to carry out (execute) the terms of the will.
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| F |
- Fair Market
Value:
-
An appraisal term for the price which a property would bring
in a competitive market given a willing seller and willing buyer,
each of whom has a reasonable knowledge of all pertinent facts,
with neither being under any compulsion to buy or sell.
- Federal Home Loan Board:
-
The board which charters and regulates federal savings and loan
associations, as well as controlling the system of Federal Home
Loan Banks.
- Federal Home
Loan Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC, Freddie Mac):
-
A quasi-governmental agency that purchases conventional mortgages
in the secondary mortgage market from depository institutions
and Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) approved
mortgage bankers.
- Federal Housing
Administration (FHA):
-
A division of the Department of Housing and Urban Development
(HUD). Its main activity is the insuring of residential mortgage
loans by private lenders.
- Federal National
Mortgage Association (FNMA, Fannie Mae):
-
A semi-governmental corporation created by Congress to support
the secondary mortgage market.
- Federal Tax Lien:
- A lien attached to
property for nonpayment of a federal tax.
- Fee Simple:
-
An estate under which the owner owns a complete interest in
the property and is entitled to the unrestricted use and enjoyment
of the property, including the right to dispose of the property.
- FHA Mortgage:
- A mortgage that is insured
by the Federal Housing Administration (FHA). Also known
as a government mortgage.
- Finance Charge:
-
A total of all costs imposed directly or indirectly by the creditor
and payable either directly or indirectly by the customer, as
defined by the federal Truth-in-Lending laws.
- Fixed Rate Loan:
-
A loan on which the same rate of interest is charged for the
life of the loan.
- Fixture:
-
Personal property which is permanently attached to real property,
and, as such, becomes part of the real property.
- Foreclosure:
- A proceeding in or out
of court, to extinguish all rights, title, and interest, of
the owner(s) of property in order to sell the property to satisfy
a lien against it.
- Freddie Mac (FHLMC):
- Federal Home Loan
Mortgage Corporation. A federal Agency purchasing first
mortgages, both conventional and federally insured, from members
of the Federal Reserve System, and the Federal Home Loan Bank
System.
- Free and Clear:
- Real property against
which there are no liens, especially voluntary liens (mortgages).
- Full Disclosure:
-
Revealing all the known facts which may affect
the decision of a buyer or tenant.
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| G |
- General Lien:
- A lien such as a tax lien
or judgment lien which attaches to all property of the debtor
rather than the lien of, for example, a trust deed, which attaches
only to a specific property.
- Ginnie Mac (GNMA):
- Government National
Mortgage Association. A federal association working with
FHA which offers special assistance in obtaining mortgages,
and purchases mortgages in a secondary capacity.
- Good Faith Estimate:
- In real estate
transactions, an estimated breakdown of the borrower's closing
costs given by the lender prior to the closing.
- Grandfather Clause:
- The clause in a
law permitting the continuation of a use, business, etc., which,
when was permissible but, because of a change in the law is
now not permissible.
- Grantee:
-
One to whom a grant is made. The purchaser of real property.
- Grantor:
- One who has made a grant. The seller of real property.
- Ground Rent:
- Rent paid for vacant land. If the property is improved,
ground rent is the portion attributable to the land only.
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| H |
- Hazard Insurance:
- Insurance coverage that
compensates for physical damage to a property from fire, wind,
vandalism, or other hazards.
- Heir and Assigns:
- Words usually found
in a deed, showing the interest the grantee is receiving.
- Hidden Defect:
- An encumbrance on a
title that is not apparent in the public records; for example,
unknown heirs, secret marriages and forged instruments.
- Home Inspection:
- A thorough inspection
that evaluates the structural and mechanical condition of a
property. A satisfactory home inspection is often included
as a contingency by the purchaser.
- Homeowner Association:
- An association
of people who own homes in a given area for the purpose of improving
or maintaining the quality of the area.
- Homeowner's Insurance:
- An insurance
policy that combines personal liability insurance and hazard
insurance coverage for a dwelling and its contents.
- HUD-1 Statement:
- A document that provides an itemized listing of the closing
costs and funds that are payable at closing.
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| I |
- Impound Account:
- An account held by a
lender for the payment of taxes, insurance or other periodic
debts against real property.
- Indemnity Agreement:
- An agreement by
which a party agrees to repay another for any loss or damage
the latter may suffer.
- Ingress and Egress:
- A right to enter
upon and pass through land.
- Installment Note:
- A note calling for
payment of both principal and interest in specified amounts,
or specified minimum amounts, at specific intervals.
- Instrument:
- Any writing having legal
form and significance, such as a deed, mortgage, will, lease,
etc.
- Intangible Property:
- Property which
has value but cannot be physically touched, such as a patent,
the goodwill of a business, etc.
- Interest Rate:
- The percentage of an
amount of money which is paid for its use for a specified time.
- Interpleader:
- A court action filed
by the escrow holder to determine to whom disputed funds should
be given.
- Intestate:
- Without leaving a will, or leaving an invalid will so that the
property of the estate passes by the laws of succession rather
than by direction of the deceased.
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| J |
- Joint and Several:
- A liability which allows
the creditor to sue any one of the debtors or sue all together.
- Joint Tenancy:
- A means of ownership
in which two or more persons own equal shares in real property.
Upon the death of one tenant, his/her share passes to the remaining
tenant(s) until title is vested in the last survivor.
- Judgment Lien:
- A lien against the property of a judgment
debtor. An involuntary lien.
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| L |
- Land Contract:
- An installment contract
for the sale of land. The seller (vendor) has legal title
until paid in full. The buyer (vendee) has equitable title
during the contract term.
- Landlocked Parcel:
- A parcel of land
surrounded entirely by privately owned land, with no right of
access to a public road.
- Late Charge:
- A penalty for failure
to pay an installment on time.
- Lease with Option to Purchase:
- A lease
under which the lessee has the right to purchase the property.
The option may run for the length of the lease or only for a
portion of the lease period.
- Leasehold:
- An estate in realty held
under a lease; an estate for a fixed term.
- Legal Description:
-
A means of identifying real property in deeds and other documents.
- Lessee:
- The party to whom a lease (the
right to possession) is given in return for a consideration
(rent).
- Lessor:
- The party (usually the owner)
who gives the lease (right to possession) in return for a consideration
(rent).
- Lien:
-
A recorded document which claims an interest in real property
as security for a debt owed. Such liability may be created by
contract, such as a deed of trust, or by a court judgment.
- Life Estate:
- An estate in real property
for the life of a living person.
- Limited Partnership:
- A partnership
consisting of one or more general partners who conduct the business
and are responsible for losses, and one or more limited partners,
contributing capital and liable only to the amount contributed.
- Lis Pendens:
- A legal notice recorded
to show pending litigation relating to real property and giving
notice that anyone acquiring an interest in said property subsequent
to the date of the notice may be bound by the outcome of the
litigation. Also called a notice of pendency of action.
- Loan Servicer:
- An organization that
collects principal and interest payments from borrowers and
manages borrowers' escrow accounts. The servicer often
services mortgages that have been purchased by an investor in
the secondary mortgage market.
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| M |
- Marketable Title:
-
Title which can be readily marketed (sold) to a reasonably prudent
purchaser aware of the facts and their legal meaning concerning
liens and encumbrances.
- Mechanic’s Lien:
-
A lien on real estate which secures the payment of debts due
to persons who perform labor or services or furnish materials
incident to the construction of buildings and improvements on
real estate.
- Metes and Bounds:
-
A form of land description in which boundaries are described
by courses, directions, distances and monuments.
- Mortgage Broker:
- One who for a fee,
brings together a borrower and lender, and handles the necessary
applications for the borrower to obtain a loan against real
property by giving a mortgage or deed of trust as security.
- Mortgage Guaranty Insurance Corporation
(MGIC):
- A private corporation which, for a fee, insures
mortgage loans similar to FHA and VA insurance, although not
insuring as great a percentage of the loan.
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| N |
- Negative Amortization:
- Negative amortization
occurs when the monthly payments do not cover all of the interest
cost. The interest cost which is not covered by the payment
is added to the unpaid principal balance. This means that
even after making many payments, you could owe more than you
did at the beginning of the loan.
- Nonconforming Use:
- A property which does not conform
to the zoning of an area.
- Notarization:
-
The certification by a Notary Public that a person signing a
document has been properly identified. Notarization does not
certify the content of a document, only validity of signature.
- Note:
- A written promise to repay a
certain sum of money on specified terms.
- Notice of Completion:
- A notice, recorded
to show that a construction job is finished. The length
of time in which mechanic's liens may be filed depends upon
when and if a valid notice of completion is recorded.
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| O |
- Origination Fee:
- A fee or charge for
work involved in the evaluation, preparation and submission
of a proposed mortgage loan.
- Owners Policy:
- Title insurance for the owner of real property.
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| P |
- Paper:
- A mortgage, deed of trust, or
land contract, which is given instead of cash.
- Partial Release:
- A release of a portion
of property covered by a mortgage.
- Perc Test (Percolation):
- The test to
determine the capability of the soil to absorb liquid, both
for construction and septic systems.
- PITI (Principal, Interest, Taxes and Insurance):
-
The four components of a monthly mortgage payment.
Principal refers to the part of the monthly payment that reduces
the remaining balance of the mortgage. Interest is the
fee charged for borrowing money. Taxes and insurance refer
to the amounts that are paid into an escrow account each month
for property taxes and mortgage and hazard insurance.
- Planned Unit Development:
- A subdivision
of five or more individually owned lots with one or more other
parcels owned in common or with reciprocal rights in one or
more other parcels.
- Points:
- A point is equal to one percent
of the principal amount of the loan.
- Prequalification:
- The process of determining
how much money a prospective homebuyer will be eligible to borrow
before buying a home and applying for a loan.
- Principal:
-
The sum of money outstanding upon which interest is payable.
- Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI):
-
Insurance written by a private mortgage insurance company protecting
the mortgage lender against loss occasioned by a mortgage default
and foreclosure.
- Property Tax:
- Generally, tax levied
on both real and personal property.
- Proration:
-
The method used in dividing charges into that portion which
applies only to a party's ownership up to particular date.
- Purchase Money Mortgage:
- A Mortgage given by the buyer as part
of the purchase consideration.
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| Q |
- Qualification:
-
The process of reviewing a prospective borrower's credit and
payment capacity prior to approving a loan.
- Quitclaim Deed:
-
A deed relinquishing all interest, title or claim in a property.
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| R |
- Real Estate
Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA):
-
A federal statute requiring disclosure of certain costs in the
sale of residential, improved property which is to be financed
by a federally insured lender.
- Real Estate:
- Land and anything permanently
affixed to the land.
- Reconveyance:
-
The conveyance to the landowner of the title, held by a trustee
under a deed of trust, when the performance of the debt is satisfied.
- Record Owner:
-
The owner of property as shown by an examination of the public
record.
- Recordation:
-
Filing for record in the office of the county recorder for the
purpose of giving constructive notice.
- Recourse:
- The right of the holder of
a note secured by a mortgage or deed of trust to look personally
to the borrower or endorser for payment.
- Rescind:
- To void or cancel.
- Right of Survivorship:
- The right of
a survivor of a deceased person to the property of the deceased.
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| S |
- Secondary Financing:
- A loan secured
by a mortgage or trust deed which is junior to another mortgage
or trust deed.
- Security:
- Real or personal property
pledged by a borrower, as protection for the lender's interest.
- Septic System:
- A sewage system, whereby
waste is drained through pipes and a tile field into a septic
tank.
- Set Back Ordinance:
- Regulates the distance
from the lot line to the point where improvements may be constructed.
- Settlement Statement:
- A statement prepared
by broker, escrow, or lender, giving a complete breakdown of
costs involved in a real estate sale.
- Simultaneous Issue:
- A simultaneous
issuance by a title insurance company of policies insuring both
an owner and a lender. The lender's policy is issued at
a reduced rate.
- Specific Performance:
- An action to
compel the performance of a contract, when money damages for
breach would not be satisfactory.
- Statement of
Information (SI):
-
A confidential information statement completed by the buyer,
seller or borrower. Allows title companies to differentiate
between parties with similar names when searching matters such
as liens and court decrees.
- Statutory Lien:
- An involuntary lien,
includes tax liens, judgment liens, mechanic liens, etc.
- "Subject To"
Clause:
- A clause in a contract of sale setting forth any contingencies
or special conditions of purchase and sale, such as an offer
made and accepted subject to financing, securing certain zoning
or similar requirements.
- Subordination Agreement:
-
An agreement under which a prior or superior lien is made inferior
or subject to an otherwise junior lien.
- Substitution of Trustee:
- A document
which is recorded to change the trustee under the deed of trust.
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| T |
- Tangible Property:
- That property which
can be touched. For example: A window (glass) is
tangible.
- Tax Lien:
-
A statutory lien imposed against real property for taxes.
- Tax Sale:
- Public sale of property
at auction by governmental authority, after a period of nonpayment
of property taxes.
- Tenancy in Common:
-
Co-ownership in a property by two or more persons, each of whom
has an undivided interest in the whole property.
- Title Insurance:
- An insurance policy
insuring the title to land.
- Title Plant:
-
The information warehouse of a title company in which it has
accumulated and is constantly updating title records of properties
which it can use to search title to real property.
- Title:
- The ownership of an interest in land.
- Trustee:
- A person who holds title in trust for the benefit of another.
In a deed of trust, the trustee is the person named to hold
title in trust for the benefit of the lender until the loan
is paid off.
- Trustee's Deed:
- A deed by a trustee
under a deed of trust, issued to a purchaser at auction, pursuant
to foreclosure.
- Trustor:
- Usually the
borrower under a deed of trust. One who deeds their property
to a trustee as security for repayment of a loan.
- Truth-In-Lending:
- A federal law that
requires lenders to fully disclose, in writing, the terms and
conditions of a mortgage, including the annual percentage rate
(APR) and other charges.
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- Underwriting:
- The process of evaluating risk.
- Uniform Commercial Code:
- The law which
regulates the transfer and encumbrance of personal property.
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- VA Mortgage:
- A mortgage that is guaranteed
by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). Also known
as a government mortgage.
- Vesting:
-
Denotes the manner in which title is held. Examples of common
vestings are: Community Property, Joint Tenancy and Tenancy
in Common.
- Veterans Administration (VA):
- VA has
power and authority to guarantee or insure payment of loans
made to veterans by private lending institutions. This function
is similar to that of FHA. VA also makes direct loans to veterans
in non-urban areas where private loan funds are not available.
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