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Glossary of Basic Real Estate Terms
- A
- Abstract - A history of all transactions
shown in the public records affecting a particular tract of land.
- Abstract Plant - See Title Plant.
- Adjustable Rate Mortgage (ARM) - Mortgage
loans under which the interest rate is periodically adjusted, in accordance
with some market indicator, to more closely coincide with the current
rates. The extent and number of these adjustments are agreed to at
the inception of the loan.
- Adverse Possession - The possession, by one
person, of land belonging to another in a manner deemed adverse to
the interest of the owner. In most states, by operation of law, title
to the land becomes vested in such person after a fixed number of
years if the owner fails to assert his or her rights.
- Affidavit - A written statement made under
oath before a notary public or other judicial officer.
- Agreement - A legally binding contract made
between two or more persons.
- ALTA (American Land Title Association) -
The trade association of the title insurance industry, which has adopted
certain insurance policy formats to standardize coverage on a national
basis.
- Amortization - Payment to reduce the principal
of a debt in regular, periodic installments.
- Appraisal - A report from an independent
third party detailing the estimated value of real estate.
- Appurtenance - A right or privilege that
is a part of the ownership of property, such as a right of way to
a highway across the land of another. Water rights are also an example.
- Assessment -
(1) The valuation of real estate for purposes of taxes or special
improvement charges.
(2) The amount of taxes or special improvement charges. Special improvement
charges are usually for the costs of streets, sidewalks, sewers, etc.
- Assignment -
(1) The act of transferring an interest, such as a loan secured by
a mortgage, from one person to another.
(2) The instrument or paper by which one person transfers such ownership
to another.
- Attorney's Opinion - A statement by an attorney
as to the validity of a title, arrived at after investigation of the
history of the title as recorded in the public records.
- B
- Back Title Letter - Also called "back title
certificate" in some areas, and "starter" in others. When titles previously
have been examined up to a certain date by reliable examiners, title
companies sometimes give subsequent examiners of such titles a letter
that sets forth the condition of the title at the time of the previous
examination and authorizes them to begin their subsequent examination
with the terminal date of the previous examination.
- Balloon Note - A form of promissory note
that calls for the minimum payment of principal and the payment of
interest at regular intervals. This type of note requires a substantial
final payment, which represents all the principal.
- Bankruptcy - A proceeding in U.S. District
Court wherein assets of an insolvent debtor are protected and distributed
in an equitable manner.
- Binder - Sometimes called "preliminary certificate"
or "commitment."
(1) A preliminary report as to the condition of a title and a commitment
to issue a title insurance policy in a certain manner when certain
conditions are met.
(2) A deposit in escrow of a small part of the purchase price of real
estate as evidence of good faith and to bind an agreement to purchase.
- C
- Certificate of Title - A certificate issued
by a title examiner stating the condition of a title.
- Chain - In real estate measurements (surveying),
a chain is 66 feet long or 100 links, each link being 7.92 inches.
The measurement may change when used in fields other than surveying.
- Chain of Title - The successive ownership
or transfers in the history of title to a tract of land.
- Claim - An adverse right or interest asserted
by one party against another or against an insurer or indemnitor.
Claims may arise from unpaid debts or taxes, as well as from hidden
title defects such as fraud, forgery, missing heirs, etc.
- Clear Title - Real property ownership free
of liens, defects, encumbrances or claims.
- Closing - Also called "settlement." A meeting
of all parties involved in a property transaction during which the
transaction is consummated.
- Clouded Title - An irregularity, possible
claim or encumbrance that, if valid, would adversely affect or impair
the title.
- Coinsurance - Two or more policies of title
insurance issued by different insurers, each covering a portion of
the same risk, which together provide total coverage of the risk.
- Commitment - Also called "binder." A document
issued by a title insurance company that contains the conditions under
which a policy of title insurance will be issued.
- Condemnation -
(1) The taking of private property for a public purpose, with compensation
to the owner under the right of eminent domain. Governmental units,
railroads and utility companies have the right to condemn and take
private property.
(2) The destruction by government of private property that imperils
the life, health or safety of the public.
- Conventional Loan - A loan secured by a mortgage
or deed of trust for which the loan-to-value ratio is within an acceptable
range for a particular lending institution.
- Conveyance - The transfer of title to property
from one person to another.
- Covenant - A formal agreement or contract
between two parties in which one party gives the other certain promises
and assurances, such as covenants of warranty in a warranty deed.
- Courtesy - A right that a husband has in
his wife's property at her death. It does not exist in all states.
- D
- Dedication - The setting aside of certain
land by the owner and declaring it to be for public use. Examples:
streets, sidewalks and parks.
- Deed - A document through which a conveyance
of property is effected.
- Deed Restriction - A covenant contained in
a deed imposing limits on the use or occupancy of the real estate
or the type, size, purpose or location of improvements to be constructed
on it.
- Defect - A blemish, imperfection or deficiency.
A defective title is one that is irregular and faulty.
- Depreciation - Loss in value occasioned by
ordinary wear and tear, destructive action of the elements, or functional
or economic obsolescence.
- Devise - A gift of real estate made by a
will.
- Dominant Estate - The property for the benefit
of which a right-of-way easement exists across another's adjoining
piece of land is said to be the dominant estate. The land across which
the easement runs is said to be the servient estate.
- Dower - A right that a wife has in her husband's
property at the time of his death. Does not exist in all states.
- E
- Earnest Money - A deposit of funds by the
purchaser of a piece of real estate as evidence of good faith.
- Easement - A right to use all or part of
the land owned by another for a specific purpose. An easement may,
for example, entitle its holder to install and maintain sewer or utility
lines.
- Eminent Domain - The right of a government
to take privately owned property for public purposes under condemnation
proceedings subject to payment of its fair market value.
- Encroachment - Any building, improvement
or structure located on one property (such as a wall, fence or driveway)
that intrudes upon the property of another.
- Encumbrance - Any interest, right lien or
liability attached to a parcel of land (such as unpaid taxes or an
unsatisfied mortgage) that constitutes or represents a burden or charge
upon the property.
- Equity - The market value of real property,
less the amount of existing liens.
- Escheat - The reversion of property to the
state when an owner dies leaving no legal heirs, devisees or claimants.
- Escrow - A method of closing a real estate
transaction in which all required documents and funds are placed with
a third party for processing and disbursement.
- Estoppel - A legal restraint that stops or
prevents a person from contradicting or reneging on his previous position
or previous assertions or commitments.
- Examination - The study of the instruments
and muniments' incident to a chain of title to determine their effect
and condition in order to reach a conclusion as to the status of the
title.
- Exception - A provision in a title insurance
binder or policy that excludes liability for a specific title defect
or an outstanding lien or encumbrance.
- Execute - To sign a legal instrument. A deed
is said to be executed when it is signed, sealed, witnessed and delivered.
- F
- Fannie Mae (FNMA) - Federal National Mortgage
Association. A private corporation dealing in the purchase of first
mortgages.
- Fee Simple Deed - The absolute ownership
of a parcel of land. The highest degree of ownership that a person
can have in real estate, which gives the owner unqualified ownership
and full power of disposition.
- FHA (Federal Housing Administration) - A
federal agency that insures first mortgages, enabling lenders to lend
a very high percentage of the sale price.
- Fixed Rate Mortgage - A mortgage having a
rate of interest that remains the same for the life of the mortgage.
- Fixtures - Personal property that is attached
to real property and is legally treated as real property while it
is so attached. Examples: medicine cabinets, window blinds and chandeliers.
- Foreclosure - A legal proceeding in which
real estate secured by a mortgage or deed of trust is sold to satisfy
the underlying debt.
- Forgery - The fraudulent signing of another's
name to an instrument such as a deed, mortgage or check.
- Freddie Mac (FHLMC) - Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corporation. A federal agency that purchases both conventional and
federally insured first mortgages from members of the Federal Reserve
System and the Federal Home Loan Bank System.
- G
- Ginnie Mac (GNMA) - Government National Mortgage
Association. A federal association working with the FHA that offers
special assistance in obtaining mortgages and purchases mortgages
in the secondary market.
- Grant - To bestow or confer, with or without
compensation, a gift such as land or money by one having control or
authority over the gift.
- Grantee - One to whom a grant is made.
- Grantor - One who makes a grant.
- H
- Hereditament - Any and all kinds of estates,
interest and rights in real estate that can be inherited.
- Homeowners Insurance - Real estate insurance
protecting against loss caused by fire, some natural causes, vandalism,
etc., depending on the terms of the policy. Also includes coverage
such as personal liability and theft away from home.
- HUD (Department of Housing and Urban Development)
- The federal department responsible for the major housing programs
in the United States.
- I
- Index -
(1) An alphabetical listing in the public records of the names of
parties to recorded real estate instruments together with the book
and page number of the record.
(2) The listing in abstract and title plants of recorded real estate
instruments in groups according to land descriptions, known as a geographic
index.
(3) The alphabetical listing in abstract and title plants, by names
of the parties, of all recorded instruments that affect but do not
describe particular real estate, such as judgments, powers of attorney,
wills and probate proceedings. Such indexes are known by various names,
such as "general index," "judgment index" and "name index."
- Instrument - Any written document having
a legal effect.
- J
- Judgment - The determination of a court regarding
the rights of parties in an action. A judgment of debt on a property
owner can create a lien on all of that owner's land within a certain
jurisdiction.
- Junior Mortgage - A mortgage lower in lien
priority than another.
- L
- Leasehold - The right to possession and use
of land for a fixed period of time. The lease is the agreement that
creates the right.
- Lessee - A tenant holding a leasehold
- Lessor - A landlord; one who gives a leasehold
to a lessee.
- License - Permission to go upon or use the
land of another, the permission being a personal privilege and not
constituting an interest in the land.
- Lien - A monetary charge imposed on a property,
usually arising from some debt or obligation.
- Lien Waiver - Also called "waiver of liens."
A waiver of mechanics' lien rights, signed by contractors or subcontractors.
- Link - In surveying, a length of 7.92 inches.
- Loan Policy - Also called "mortgagee policy."
A title insurance policy insuring a mortgagee, or beneficiary under
a deed of trust, against loss caused by invalidity or unenforceability
of a lien, or loss of priority of the mortgage or deed of trust.
- Lis Pendens - A legal notice intending to
bind third parties of litigation claiming an interest in real estate.
- Lot - Generally, any portion or parcel of
real property. Usually refers to a portion of a subdivision.
- M
- Market Value - The average of the highest
price that a buyer, willing but not compelled to buy, would pay and
the lowest price a seller, willing but not compelled to sell, would
accept.
- Mechanic's Lien - A lien on real estate,
created by operation of law, that secures the payment of debts due
to persons who perform labor or services or furnish materials incident
to the construction of buildings and improvements in real estate.
- Metes and Bounds - A land description in
which boundaries are described by courses, directions, distances and
monuments.
- Mortgage - A conditional pledge of property
to a creditor as security for the payment of a debt.
- Mortgage Insurance - Insurance written by
an independent mortgage insurance company protecting the mortgage
lender against loss incurred by a mortgage default, thus enabling
the lender to lend a higher percentage of the sale price.
- Mortgagee - The holder of a mortgage. The
party to whom a mortgage is made, generally the lender.
- Mortgagee Policy - See Loan Policy.
- Mortgagor - A person who mortgages property.
A person who executes a mortgage, generally the property owner.
- Multiple Listing - The pooling in a central
bureau of listings of properties for sale. These listings are held
individually by members of a group of real estate brokers, with the
agreement that any member of the group may sell the properties and,
in the case of a sale, the commission will be divided between the
broker making the sale and the broker who filed the listing.
- Muniment of Title - Written evidence (documents)
that an owner possesses to prove his or her title to property.
- N
- Note - Also called "promissory note." A written
promise to pay a sum of money, usually at a specified interest rate,
at a stated time to a named payee.
- O
- Owner's Policy - A policy of title insurance
insuring an owner of real estate against loss occasioned by defects
in, liens against, or unmarketability of the owner's title.
- P
- Plat - Also called "plat map." A map dividing
a parcel of land into lots, as in a subdivision. A plat book contains
the plat maps for a given area.
- Point - Also called "commission points" or
"discount points." One percent of the amount of the loan.
- Premium - The amount payable for an insurance
policy.
- Prescriptive Easement - A right to use another's
property that is not inconsistent with the owner's rights and that
is acquired by an open, notorious, adverse and continuous use for
the statutory period, for example 20 years.
- Principal -
- (1) A sum of money owed as a debt on which interest
is payable.
- (2) A person who empowers another to act as his
representative or agent.
- (3) The person having prime responsibility for an
obligation as distinguished from one who acts as a surety or endorser.
- Purchase Money Mortgage - A mortgage given
by a purchaser to a seller on the subject property to secure payment
of a part of the purchase price.
- Q
- Quit Claim Deed - A deed that does not imply
that the grantor holds title, but that surrenders and gives to the
grantee any possible interest or rights that the grantor may have
in the property.
- R
- Real Estate - Also called "real property."
- (1) Land and anything permanently affixed to the
land, such as buildings, such as light fixtures, plumbing and heating
fixtures, or other such items that would be personal property if not
attached.
- (2) May refer to rights in real property as well
as the property itself.
- Recording - The noting in a public office
of the details of a legal document - such as a deed or mortgage -
affecting the title to real estate. When such an instrument is properly
recorded, it is considered to be a matter of public record. Legally,
that means that all subsequent purchasers are deemed to have constructive
knowledge of that information.
- Reinsurance - A contractual relationship
between two insurance companies under which one insurer assumes a
portion of the risk of the insurance policy written by the other.
- Release -
- (1) To relieve from debt or security or abandon
a right, such as the release of a mortgage lien from a part or all
of the land mortgaged.
- (2) The instrument effecting a release.
- Restrictions - Limitations on the use of
property imposed or created by deeds or other documents in the chain
of title. A restriction, for example, may prohibit the placement of
a trailer or the construction of a commercial structure on the property.
- Riparian Rights - The rights of owners of
lands bordering watercourses which relate to the water and its use.
- S
- Sale Agreement - A contract entered into
between a buyer and seller, setting forth the terms, provisions and
conditions of a sale of real estate.
- Sale and Leaseback - The sale of an asset
to a buyer who immediately leases it back to the seller.
- Search - The careful exploration and perusal
of the public records in an effort to find all recorded instruments
relating to a particular chain of title.
- Second Mortgages - A mortgage ranking in
priority immediately below a first mortgage.
- Subordination - The act or process by which
a person's rights are ranked below the rights of others. For example,
a second mortgagee's rights are subordinate to those of the first
mortgagee.
- Surety -
- (1) A person who agrees to be responsible for a
debt or obligation of another.
- (2) The pledge or agreement by which one undertakes
responsibility for the debt or obligation of another.
- T
- Title -
(1) A combination of all the elements that constitute the highest
legal right to own, possess, use, control, enjoy and dispose of real
estate or an inheritable right or interest therein.
(2) The rights of ownership recognized and protected by the law.
- Title Covenants - Covenants ordinarily inserted
in conveyances and in transfers of title to real estate for the purpose
of giving protection to the purchaser against possible insufficiency
of the title received. A group of such covenants again encumbrances;
covenants of good right and authority to convey; covenants of quiet
enjoyment; covenants of seisin; covenants of warranty. (See Warranty
or Covenant.)
- Title Defect -
- (1) Any possible or patent claim or right outstanding
in a chain of title that is adverse to the claim of ownership.
- (2) Any material irregularity in the execution or
effect of an instrument in the chain of title.
- Title Insurance Policy - A contract of title
insurance under which the insurer, in keeping with the terms of the
policy, agrees to indemnify the insured against loss arising from
claims against the insured interest.
- Title Plant - Also called "abstract plant"
in some areas. A geographically filed assemblage of title information
that helps in expediting title examinations, such as copies of previous
attorneys' opinions, abstracts, tax searches and copies or take-offs
of the public records.
- U
- Underwriter - An insurance company that issues
insurance policies to the public or to another insurer.
- V
- Variable Interest Rate - Also called "flexible
interest rate." An interest rate that fluctuates as the prevailing
rate moves up or down. In mortgages, there are usually maximums as
to the frequency and amount of fluctuation.
- Veterans Administration (VA) Loans - Housing
loans to veterans by banks, savings and loans, or other lenders that
are guaranteed by the Veterans Administration, enabling veterans to
buy a residence with little or no down payment.
- W
- Waiver - The voluntary and intentional relinquishment
of a known right, claim or privilege.
- Warranty - In a broad sense, an agreement
or undertaking by a seller to be responsible for present or future
losses of the purchaser occasioned by deficiency or defect in the
quality, condition or quantity of the thing sold. In a stricter sense,
the provision or provisions in a deed, lease or other instrument conveying
or transferring an estate or interest in real estate under which the
seller becomes liable to the purchaser for defects in or encumbrances
on the title. (See Title Covenants.)
- Will - A testamentary disposition of property,
usually in a form prescribed by law, that effect upon death
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