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Real Estate Dictionary |
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- 80-10-10
- A type of blended
mortgage loan which avoids private mortgage insurance
(PMI). It consists of an 80% - 30 year first lien at
market rates, a 10% - 15 year second lien at a
slightly higher interest rate, and a 10% down
payment. Instead of having to come up with a 20% down
payment, a buyer is able to avoid
PMI
with only 10% down. While the interest rate on the
second note is a bit higher, the total monthly payment
is usually lower than a 90% mortgage with PMI. In
addition, the extra interest paid for the second lien
is tax deductable, whereas PMI is not. It is also
possible to payoff just the second lien, thereby
lowering the future monthly payments. Some lenders
also offer 75-15-10 and 80-15-5 programs. This type
of mortgage also gives the consumer the option of
having a non-escrowing
loan without a 20% downpayment.
- abstract of title
- A condensed version
of the history of title to a piece of land that lists
any transfers in ownership, as well as any liabilities
attached to it, such as mortgages.
- abutting
- The joining,
reaching, or touching of adjoining land. Abutting
pieces of land have a common boundary.
- acceleration
clause
- A provision in a
written mortgage, note, bond or conditional sales
contract that, in the event of default, the whole
amount of principal and interest may be declared to be
due and payable at once.
- acceptance
- An offeree’s consent
to enter into a contract and be bound by the terms of
the offer.
- accretion
- An addition to land
through natural causes.
- acknowledgment
- A declaration made by
a person to a notary public, or other public official
authorized to take acknowledgments, that the
instrument was executed by him and that it was his
free and voluntary act.
- acre
- A measure of land
equal to 43,560 square feet.
-
- ad valorem
- Designates an
assessment of taxes against property. Literally,
according to value.
-
- additional
principal payment
- A payment by a
borrower of more than the scheduled principal amount
due in order to reduce the remaining balance on the
loan.
- adjustable rate
mortgage (ARM)
- A mortgage loan whose
interest rate fluctuates according to the movements of
an assigned index or a designated market
indicator--such as the weekly average of one-year U.S.
Treasury Bills--over the life of the loan. To avoid
constant and drastic fluctuations, ARMs typically
limit how often and by how much the interest rate can
vary.
-
- adjusted basis
- The original cost of
a property plus the value of any capital expenditures
for improvements to the property minus any
depreciation taken.
-
- adjustment date
- The date on which the
interest rate changes for an
adjustable-rate
mortgage (ARM).
-
- adjustment period
- The period that
elapses between the adjustment dates for an
adjustable-rate
mortgage (ARM).
- adjustments
- Money that the buyer
and sellers credit each other at the time of closing.
Often includes taxes and down payment.
- administrator/administratrix
- A man/woman appointed
by a court to settle the estate of a deceased person
when there is no will. Contrast with
executor/executrix.
- adverse possession
- The right of an
occupant of land to acquire title against the real
owner, where possession has been actual, continuous,
hostile, visible, and distinct for the statutory
period. The requirements for adversely possessing
property vary between states, but usually include
continuous and open use for a period of five or more
years and paying taxes on the property in question.
- affidavit
- Written statement
signed and sworn to before some person authorized to
take an oath.
- agency
- The legal
relationship between a principal and an agent. In real
estate transactions, usually the seller is the
principal, and the broker is the agent: however, a
buyer represented by a broker (i.e., buyer as
principal is a growing trend. In an agency
relationship, the principal delegates to the agent the
right to act on his or her behalf in business
transactions and to exercise some discretion while so
acting. The agent has a fiduciary relationship with
the principal and owes to that principal the duties of
accounting, care, loyalty, and obedience. Also see
buyer's broker.
- agent
- A person authorized
to act for and under the direction of another person
when dealing with third parties. The person who
appoints an agent is called the principal. An agent
can enter into binding agreements on the principal's
behalf and may even create liability for the principal
if the agent causes harm while carrying out his or her
duties. See also attorney-in-fact.
- alienation Clause
- A clause in a
mortgage, which gives the lender the right to call the
entire loan balance due if the property is sold;
due-on-sale clause.
- amenities
- Non monetary benefits
and satisfactions derived from property ownership,
such as a pleasant view, pride in home ownership, etc.
- ammendment
- A modification to an
existing contract, mutually agreed to by all parties.
Examples might include a change in the pruchase price
due to a low appraisal, or a change in the closing
date.
- amortization
- The operation of
paying off indebtedness, such as a mortgage, by
installments. The conventional amortization periods
are15 or 30 years. (See term)
- amortized mortgage
- A mortgage requiring
periodic payments that include both interest and
principal. Also see
self amortized loan.
- annual membership
- The amount that is
charged annually for having a line of credit
available. Often charged regardless of whether or not
you use the line.
- antitrust laws
- Federal and state
laws prohibiting, among other things, monopolies,
monopolistic practices, restraint of trade, and price
fixing.
- application
- An initial statement
of personal and financial information, which is
required to approve your loan.
- application fee
- Fees that are paid
upon application. Charges for property appraisal and a
credit report are usually included in the application
fee.
- appraisal
- A determination of
the value of something, such as a house, jewelry or
stock. A professional appraiser--a qualified,
disinterested expert--makes an estimate by examining
the property, and looking at the initial purchase
price and comparing it with recent sales of similar
property. Courts commonly order appraisals in probate,
condemnation, bankruptcy or foreclosure proceedings in
order to determine the fair market value of property.
Banks and real estate companies use appraisals to
ascertain the worth of real estate for lending
purposes. And insurance companies require appraisals
to determine the amount of damage done to covered
property before settling insurance claims.
- appraised value
- An estimate of the
present worth.
- appreciation
- An increase in value
or worth of property. Opposite of depreciation.
- asking (list)
price
- The price placed on
property for sale.
- assessor
- A local government
official who determines the value of the property for
taxation purposes.
- assignee
- A person to whom a
property right is transferred. For example, an
assignee may take over a lease from a tenant who wants
to permanently move out before the lease expires. The
assignee takes control of the property and assumes all
the legal rights and responsibilities of the tenant,
including payment of rent. However, the original
tenant remains legally responsible if the assignee
fails to pay the rent.
- assignment
- A transfer of
property rights from one person to another, called the
assignee.
- assumable mortgage
- An existing mortgage
that can be taken over by the buyer on the same terms
given to the original borrower.
- assumption of
mortgage
- The transfer of title
to property to a grantee wherein he assumes liability
for payment of an existing note secured by a mortgage
against the property; should the mortgage be
foreclosed and the property sold for a lesser amount
than that due, the grantee-purchaser who has assumed
and agreed to pay the debt secured by the mortgage is
personally liable for the deficiency. Before a seller
may be relieved of liability under the existing
mortgage, the lender must accept the transfer of
liability for payment of the note. Also known as
simple assumption. Contrast withsubject
to mortgage.
- attachment
- Method by which a
debtor's property is placed in the custody of the law
and held as security pending outcome of a creditor's
suit.
- attorney's opinion
of title
- An instrument written
and signed by the attorney who examines the abstracts
of title, stating his opinion as to whether a seller
may convey good title.
- attractive
nuisance
- Something on a piece
of property that attracts children but also endangers
their safety. For example, unfenced swimming pools,
open pits, farm equipment and abandoned refrigerators
have all qualified as attractive nuisances.
- auction
- A public sale of
property to the highest bidder.
- balloon mortgage
- A mortgage where the
final payment is considerably larger than the
preceding payments. Contrast with
amortized mortgage.
- balloon payment
- A large final payment
due at the end of a loan, typically a home or car
loan, to pay off the amount your monthly payments
didn't cover. Many states prohibit balloon payments in
loans for goods or services that are primarily for
personal, family or household use, or require the
lender to let you refinance the balloon payment before
forcing collection.
- bill of sale
- A written instrument
given to pass title to personal property.
- blanket mortgage
- One mortgage on a
number of parcels of real property.
- blockbusting
- The illegal practice
of inducing panic selling in a neighborhood by making
representations of the entry, or prospective entry, of
members of a minority group;
panic peddling. See
Fair Housing.
-
bond
- (1) A written
agreement purchased from a bonding company that
guarantees a person will properly carry out a specific
act, such as managing funds, showing up in court,
providing good title to a piece of real estate or
completing a construction project. If the person who
purchased the bond fails at his or her task, the
bonding company will pay the aggrieved party an amount
up to the value of the bond.
-
- (2) An
interest-bearing document issued by a government or
company as evidence of a debt. A bond provides
pre-determined payments at a set date to the bond
holder. Bonds may be "registered" bonds, which provide
payment to the bond holder whose name is recorded with
the issuer and appears on the bond certificate, or
"bearer" bonds, which provide payments to whomever
holds the bond in-hand. Mortgage interest rates are
closely related to long term bond interest rates.
-
- bonus to selling
agent (BTSA)
- Compensation, above
and beyond the sales commission, offered to the real
estate agent who brings the buyer to the transaction.
A BTSA is used to provide an extra incentive for real
estate agents to show a particular listing. Often the
bonus is tied to closing within a certain time period
or the property selling for a certain price. A
buyer's agent should not consider the BTSA a factor in
any negotiations between buyer and seller.
Realistically, most BTSA's tend to disappear during
initial negotiations, eventhough they should never be
considered as negotiable after they have been
offered. Any bonus to selling agent should be
contained in a written agreement between the seller
and listing broker. The BTSA is technically offered
by the listing broker, not the seller, and thus should
not be a subject of negotiation.
- breach of contract
- Failure, without
legal excuse, of one of the parties to a contract to
perform according to the contract.
- brokerage
- For a commission or
fee, bringing together parties interested in buying,
selling, exchanging, or leasing real property.
-
- BTSA
- Acronym -
bonus to selling
agent.
- building line
- A line fixed at a
certain distance from the front and/or sides of a lot
beyond which no structure can project. See
set back.
- bundle of rights
- Ownership in real
property implies a group of rights, such as the right
of occupancy, use and enjoyment, the right to sell in
whole or in part, the right to control the use, the
right to bequeath, the right to lease any or all of
the rights, the right to the benefits derived by
occupancy and use of the property, etc.
- buy down
- A cash payment,
usually measured in points, to a lender in order to
reduce the interest rate a borrower must pay.
- buyer's broker
- A licensee who has
declared to represent only the buyer in a transaction,
regardless of whether compensation is paid by the
buyer or the listing broker through a commission
split. Some brokers conduct their business by
representing buyers only.
- calendar Year
- A year using the
actual number of days in each month for a total of 365
days in a year (366 days in a leap year).
- cap
- The maximum allowable
increase, for either payment or interest rate, for a
specified amount of time on an adjustable rate
mortgage.
-
- capital gains
- The profit on the
sale of a capital asset, such as stock or real estate.
If you sell your primary residence, you can exclude
$250,000 in profit from capital gains tax. A couple
can exclude $500,000.
- capitalization
- The estimation of the
value of income producing property by dividing the
annual net income by the capitalization rate.
- capitalization
rate
- The rate of expected
return on investment property. A ratio of income to
value.
- cash Out
- Receiving money back
when refinancing your present mortgage. Not available
on homestead property in Texas (See
homestead).
-
- CC&R
- See
covenants, conditions & restrictions.
-
- CCCS
- See
Consumer Credit
Counseling Service.
- ceiling
- The maximum allowable
interest rate over the life of the loan of an
adjustable rate mortgage.
- census
- An official count of
the number of people living in a certain area, such as
a district, city, county, state, or nation. The United
States Constitution requires the federal government to
perform a national census every ten years. The census
includes information about the respondents' sex, age,
family, and social and economic status.
- Certificate of
Eligibility
- The document given to
qualified veterans which entitles them to VA
guaranteed loans for homes, business, and mobile
homes. Certificates of eligibility may be obtained by
sending DD-214 (Separation Paper) to the local VA
office with VA form 1880 (request for Certificate of
Eligibility).
- chain of title
- A history of
conveyances and encumbrances of a property from some
starting point, whereby the present owner derives
title.
- channeling
- The illegal practice
of directing people to, or away from, certain areas or
neighborhoods because of minority status; Steering.
See Fair Housing.
- chattel
- See
personal property.
-
- cleaning fee
- A nonrefundable fee
charged by a landlord when a tenant moves in. The fee
covers the cost of cleaning the rented premises after
you move out, even if you leave the place spotless.
Cleaning fees are illegal in some states and
specifically allowed in others, but most state laws
are silent on the issue. Landlords in every state are
allowed to use the security deposit to clean a unit
that is truly dirty.
- clear title
- A land title that
doesn't have any liens (including a mortgage) against
it.
- closing
- The conclusion of the
sales transaction when the seller transfers title to
the buyer in exchange for consideration. In Texas,
these proceedings are usually held at a
title company.
- closing costs
- Costs the buyer must
pay at the time of the closing in addition to the down
payment which may include points, title charges,
credit report fee, document preparation fee, mortgage
insurance premium, inspections, appraisals,
prepayments for property taxes, deed recording fee,
and homeowners insurance. Closing costs can vary
considerably from one financial institution to
another.
- closing statement
- A detailed written
summary of the financial settlement of a real estate
transaction, showing all charges and credits made, and
all cash received and paid out.
- cloud on title
- A claim or
encumbrance that may effect title to land.
- co-op
- See
cooperative housing
or cooperative sale.
- co-tenants
- Two or more tenants
who rent the same property under the same lease or
rental agreement. Each co-tenant is 100% responsible
for carrying out the rental agreement, which includes
paying the entire rent if the other tenant skips town
and paying for damage caused by the other tenant.
- collateral
- Something of value
deposited with a lender as a pledge to secure
repayment of a loan.
- commingling
- The illegal practice
of combining or mixing clients' funds with the agent's
own funds.
- commission
- The compensation paid
to a licensed real estate broker or by the broker to
the salesman for services rendered. Usually a
percentage of the selling price of the property.
- Community
Reinvestment Act
- The federal law which
requires federally regulated lenders to describe the
geographical market area they serve. Deposits from
that area are to be reinvested in that area whenever
practical.
- comparables
- Properties which are
similar to a particular property and are used to
compare and establish a value for that property.
- compound interest
- Interest which is
computed on the principal and any unpaid accumulated
interest. Contrast with simple
interest.
- condemnation
- The act of taking
private property for public use, through due process
under the right of eminent
domain, with compensation to the owner.
- condominium
- A form of real
estate, usually a dwelling with individual ownership
of separate portions of the building plus shared
ownership of the common areas.
- consideration
- The price or subject
matter, which induces a contract; may be in money,
commodity, exchange, or a transfer of personal effort.
- constructive
eviction
- The provision of
housing that is so substandard that, for all intents
and purposes, a landlord has evicted the tenant. For
example, the landlord may refuse to provide light,
heat, water or other essential services, destroy part
of the premises or refuse to clean up an environmental
health hazard, such as lead paint dust. Because the
premises are unlivable, the tenant has the right to
move out and stop paying rent without incurring legal
liability for breaking the lease. Usually, the tenant
must first bring the problem to the landlord's
attention and allow a reasonable amount of time for
the landlord to make repairs.
-
- Consumer Credit
Counseling Service (CCCS)
- A national non-profit
agency that, at no cost, helps debtors plan budgets
and repay their debts. One major criticism of CCCS is
that each office is primarily funded by voluntary
donations from the creditors that receive payments
from debtors repaying their debts through that
office. The goal of CCCS is to insure that consumers
repay the debts that they owe. CCCS may arrange easy
payment plans that increase the chances for repayment,
but harm a consumer's credit in the process. Agreeing
to a payment plan and following it to the letter may
not stop creditors from reporting delinquent repayment
information to credit bureaus for each month the
payment falls short of the previous minimum amount.
-
- contingency
- A provision in a
contract stating that some or all of the terms of the
contract will be altered or voided by the occurrence
of a specific event. A common example is a Buyer who
enters into the purchase of another home before his
current home is sold. The Buyer will usually ask for
the Seller to make the sale contingent upon the sale
of the Buyer's current home. If the Seller receives
another offer for the property, the first Buyer must
either agree to buy the home without any contingency,
or step aside and let someone else purchase the home.
- contract
- A legally enforceable
agreement to do, or not to do, a particular thing for
a consideration.
- contract for deed
- A contract for the
sale of real estate where the deed (title) of the
property is transferred only after all the payments
have been made. Also known as a land contract,
agreement of sale, conditional sales contract, or
installment contract. Buyers should be wary of this
type of contract, since they can lose their entire
investment if the owner declares brankruptcy, before
the deed has been transferred.
- contract for
exchange of real estate
- A contract for the
sale of real estate in which the consideration is paid
wholly or partly in real property instead of cash.
- contract of sale
- The agreement between
the buyer and seller on the purchase price, terms, and
conditions necessary to both parties to convey the
title to the buyer.
- conventional loan
- A real estate loan,
which is not insured by the FHA or guaranteed by the
VA.
- conveyance
- Written instrument,
such as a deed or lease, that evidences transfer of
some ownership interest in real property from one
person to another.
-
- cooperative
housing
- (1) A form of
real estate, usually a dwelling in which residents own
shares, but do not directly own the space they
inhabit. Rather, owning a share of the building
entitles the shareholder with the right to inhabit a
certain space within the dwelling, such as an
apartment. Shares are usually proportional to the
amount of space in each apartment.
- (2) A living
arrangement in which residents must perform certain
duties or chores to benefit the entire residence, in
addition to paying room and board. A common form of
dormitory living.
-
- cooperative sale
- A sale of property in
which the buyer is brought to the transaction by a
real estate agent who works for a different real
estate broker than the listing agent. Both
brokers/companies have agreed to cooperate in closing
the property, and typically, splitting the
commission. Offers of cooperation and compensation
are commonly found in the MLS property listings.
- cost approach to
value
- An estimate of value
based on current construction costs, less
depreciation, plus land value. Contrast with the
income approach to
value and the
market data approach to
value.
- counter offer
- The rejection of an
offer to buy or sell that simultaneously makes a
different offer, changing the terms in some way. For
example, if a Buyer offers $160,000 for a home, and
the Seller replies that he wants $175,000, the Seller
has rejected the Buyer's offer of $160,000 and made a
counteroffer to sell at $175,000. The legal
significance of a counteroffer is that it completely
voids the original offer, so that if the Seller
decided to sell for $160,000 the next day, the Buyer
would be under no legal obligation to pay that amount
for the property.
-
- covenant
- A restriction on the
use of real estate that
governs its use, such as a requirement that the
property will be used only for residential purposes.
Covenants are found in deeds or in documents that bind
everyone who owns land in a particular development.
See
Covenants, Conditions & Restrictions.
- covenants,
conditions & restrictions (CC&Rs)
- The restrictions
governing the use of real
estate, usually enforced by a
homeowners'
association and passed on to the new
owners of property. For example, CC&Rs may tell you
how big your house can be, how you must landscape your
yard or whether you can have pets. If property is
subject to CC&Rs, buyers must be notified before the
sale takes place.
-
- credit bureau
- A private,
profit-making company that collects and sells
information about a person's credit history. Typical
clients include banks, mortgage lenders and credit
card companies that use the information to screen
applicants for loans and credit cards. There are three
major credit bureaus, Equifax, Experian
and Trans Union, and they are regulated by the
federal Fair Credit Reporting Act.
-
- credit file
- See
credit report.
-
- credit insurance
- Insurance a lender
offers or requires a borrower to purchase to cover the
loan. If the borrower dies or becomes disabled before
paying off the loan, the policy will pay off the
remaining balance. Federal and state consumer
protection laws require the lender to disclose to
existing and potential borrowers the terms and costs
of obtaining credit insurance because it can affect
the terms of the loan.
- credit limit
- The maximum amount
that you can borrow under a home equity plan.
-
- credit report
- An account of your
credit history, prepared by a credit bureau. A credit
report will contain both credit history, such as what
you owe to whom and whether you make the payments on
time, as well as personal history, such as your former
addresses, employment record and lawsuits in which you
have been involved. An estimated 50% of all credit
reports contain errors, such as accounts that don't
belong to you, an incorrect account status or
information reported that is older than seven years
(ten years in the case of a bankruptcy).
-
- credit score
- In the mortgage
lending world, credit scores either make or break you
when it comes to obtaining a home mortgage or getting
the best rate you can. There are three different
scores available to a mortgage lender each being
generated by the three different credit agencies. The
most popular, known as a Fico score is from Experian
(formally TRW), then there is a Beacon score from
Equifax, and finally a Emperica score from Trans
Union. This is the "mortgage scoring" system used to
get a conventional mortgage.
-
- Simply, credit scores
are numbers calculated based upon your credit history.
The better your credit, the higher your number or
score will be - the worse your credit, the lower the
score. The number of inquiries or times your credit
has been pulled in the past 90 days will also lower
your "score". In some instances, lack of credit
results in "no score" on your report requiring you to
provide "alternative credit" via your rental, utility
or telephone payment histories. There's plenty you can
do to improve your score if you know how the system
works. Just don't expect much help from your
lender--most consider the actual formulas a trade
secret and don't want people angling for an
advantage. Congress is currently working on
legislation to provide consumers with access to their
credit scores and the formulas used to calculate these
scores.
-
- There are some
lenders that do not rely on credit scores to the
degree that most do. Some times, credit reports
contain inaccuracies that lower your score, this is
when a lender has to use a common sense approach to
approving your loan. In some instances you may have to
correct your credit report, wait for your score to
improve, then reapply for the loan. Talk with your
mortgage broker or lender to understand what your
options are.
- creditor
- A person or entity
(such as a bank) to whom a debt is owed.
- cul-de-sac
- A dead end street
which widens sufficiently at the end to permit an
automobile to make a "U" turn.
DBA
Doing Business As.
Business names or aliases filed with the county.
- debenture
- Bonds issued without
security.
- debt service
- The total amount of
credit card, auto, mortgage or other debt upon which
you must pay.
- debt-service ratio
- The measurement of
debt payments to gross household income which may
include, in addition to the main wage earner's salary,
salaries of other wage earners, commissions, bonuses,
overtime, etc.
- Deceptive Trade
Practices Act
- Part of the federal
Consumer Protection Act originally passed in 1973 and
made specifically applicable to real estate in 1975,
specifically prohibiting a lengthy number of false,
misleading and deceptive acts or practices. The Texas
Supreme Court has defined a deceptive trade practice
as one "which has the capacity to deceive an average,
ordinary person, even though that person may have been
ignorant, unthinking, or credulous." Also see
Texas Deceptive Trade Practices - Consumer Protection
Act.
deduction
- In tax law, an amount
that you can subtract from the total amount on which
you owe tax. Examples of federal income tax
deductions include mortgage interest, charitable
contributions and certain state taxes. For example, if
Aimee receives an income of $60,000 in 1998 and pays
$12,000 in mortgage interest during that same year,
she can deduct $12,000 when she fills out her federal
tax return, leaving an amount of $48,000 upon which
she must pay tax.
-
- deed
- A written instrument
by which title to land is conveyed.
- deed in lieu (of
foreclosure)
- A means of escaping
an overly burdenome mortgage. If a homeowner can't
make the mortgage payments and can't find a buyer for
the house, many lenders will accept ownership of the
property in place of the money owed on the
mortgage. Even if the
lender won't agree to accept the property, the
homeowner can prepare a quitclaim deed that
unilaterally transfers the homeowner's property rights
to the lender.
- deed of trust
- The legal instrument
used in Texas in lieu of a mortgage, in which the
property is conveyed in trust to a trustee to be held
as security for a loan.
- deed restrictions
- Common name used in
the Houston area to denote
covenants, conditions & restrictions (CC&Rs).
Deed restrictions cover allowable land uses and home
types and sizes within a neighborhood. They are
especially important within Houston, and
unincorporated parts of Harris County, since
zoning does not exist in
these areas.
- default
- Non-performance of a
duty arising under a contract or otherwise.
- defeasanse
- A clause in a deed,
lease, will or other legal document that completely or
partially negates the document if a certain condition
occurs or fails to occur. Defeasance also means the
act of rendering something null and void. For example,
a will may provide that a gift of property is
defeasable--that is, it will be void--if the
beneficiary fails to marry before the willmaker's
death.
- delivery
- The actual transfer
of the deed, or an act of a seller showing intent to
make a deed effective, without which, there is no
transfer of title to the property.
- depreciation
- A loss in value.
- descent
- Acquisition of
property through inheritance laws when there is no
will (when a person dies
intestate).
- devise
- A transfer of real
estate by will or last testament.
- disclosure
- The making known of a
fact that had previously been hidden; a revelation.
For example, in many states you must disclose major
physical defects in a house you are selling, such as a
leaky roof or potential flooding problem.
- discount points
(or points)
- The amount paid
either to maintain or lower the interest rate charged.
Each point is equal to one percent (1%) of the loan
amount (i.e., two points on a $100,000 mortgage would
equal $2,000).
- discount rate
- (1) The rate
charged member banks who borrow from the Federal
Reserve System.
- (2) The rate
used to convert future income into present value.
- dispossess
- To oust from land by
legal process.
- dominant tenement
- Property that carries
a right to use a portion of a neighboring property.
For example, property that benefits from a beach
access trail across another property is the dominant
tenement.
- down payment
- An amount of money
the buyer pays which is the difference between the
purchase price and the mortgage amount.
- dual agency
- Representing the
buyer and the seller in the same transaction by the
same agent. Since there is an inherent conflict in
fiduciary obligations to two different principals,
dual agency, at best, is a risky undertaking. TRELA
requires that all parties to a dual agency have full
knowledge and consent (Disclosed Dual Agency).
Contrast with
intermediary.
- due on sale
- A clause in a
mortgage agreement providing that, if the mortgagor
(the borrower) sells, transfers, or, in some
instances, encumbers the property, the mortgagee (the
lender) has the right to demand the outstanding
balance in full.
- duress
- Forcing action or
inaction against a person's will.
- earnest money
- A deposit made by the
buyer as evidence of good faith in offering to
purchase real estate and to secure performance of the
contract. Earnest money is typically held by a title
company, in an escrow account, during the period
between acceptance of the contract and the closing.
- earnest money
contract (EMC)
- A contract for the
sale or purchase of real estate in which the purchaser
is required to tender earnest money to evidence good
faith in completing the contractual obligations.
Almost every sales contract for real estate in Texas
will be an earnest money contract. Also see
sales contract and
promulgated contracts.
- easement
- A right to use
another person's real estate for a specific purpose.
The most common type of easement is the right to
travel over another person's land, known as a right of
way. In addition, property owners commonly grant
easements for the placement of utility poles, utility
trenches, water lines or sewer lines. The owner of
property that is subject to an easement is said to be
"burdened" with the easement, because he or she is not
allowed to interfere with its use. For example, if the
deed to John's property permits Sue to travel across
John's main road to reach her own home, John cannot do
anything to block the road. On the other hand, Sue
cannot do anything that exceeds the scope of her
easement, such as widening the roadway.
- easement by
prescription
- A right to use
property, acquired by a long tradition of open and
obvious use. For example, if hikers have been using a
trail through your backyard for ten years and you've
never complained, they probably have an easement by
prescription through your yard to the trail.
- economic
obsolescence
- Loss of value of real
property due to external forces or events; eg., a
sewer plant is built next door to the subject
property. Contrast with
Functional Obsolescence.
- effective interest
rate
- The cost of credit on
a yearly basis expressed as a percentage. Includes
up-front costs paid to obtain the loan, and is,
therefore, usually a higher amount than the interest
rate stipulated in the mortgage note. Useful in
comparing loan programs with different rates and
points.
-
- effluxion of time
- The normal expiration
of a lease due to the passage of time, rather than due
to a specific event that might cause the lease to end,
such as destruction of the building.
- egress
- An exit, or the act
of exiting. The most famous use of this word was by
P.T. Barnum, who put up a large sign in his circus
tent saying "This Way to the Egress." Thinking an
egress was some type of exotic bird, people eagerly
went though the passage and found themselves outside
the circus tent. Compare
ingress.
- emblements
- Annual crops produced
by cultivation. They are deemed to be personal
property.
- eminent domain
- The right of
government to take private property for public use,
through court action known as
condemnation. The
Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution
allows the government to take private property if the
taking is for a public use and the owner is "justly
compensated" (usually, paid fair market value) for his
or her loss. A public use is virtually anything that
is sanctioned by a federal or state legislative body,
but such uses may include roads, parks, reservoirs,
schools, hospitals or other public buildings.
Sometimes called expropriation.
-
- enclave community
- Smaller in scope than
master-planned communities, enclave communities
typically blend different price ranges of residential
neighborhoods with amenities such as public recreation
areas and parks, neighborhood schools and extensive
landscaping. Recreation areas may include public
swimming pools, tennis courts, and children's play
grounds. Many offer large water features and gated
access.
- encroachment
- A fixture, or
structure, such as a wall or fence, which invades a
portion of a property belonging to another. Solutions
range from paying the rightful property owner for the
use of the property to the court-ordered removal of
the structure.
- encumbrance
- A cloud against
clear, free title to the property which does not
prevent conveyance, such as unpaid taxes, easements,
deed restrictions, mortgage loans, etc.
- endorsement
- Writing one's name,
either with or without additional words, on a
negotiable instrument, or on a paper attached to it.
- Equal Credit
Opportunity Act
- The 1974 federal law
(Title VII of the Consumer Credit Protection Act)
which requires fairness and impartiality without
discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion,
national origin, sex or marital status, or receipt of
income from public assistance programs in the
extension of credit, and good faith exercises of any
right under the Consumer Credit Protection Act (eg.
the creditor must state reasons for denial of credit).
- Equal
Treatment/Different Impact
- It is possible to be
guilty of discrimination even by treating two
individuals the same. If the results of the treatment
are discriminatory, or tend to exclude or otherwise
harm members of a minority group, or have
discriminatory impact, they are against the law. For
example, an apartment house which rents only to
doctors and lawyers, where there are few, if any,
minority doctors or lawyers in the area, may be a
violation of the Fair
Housing Laws.
- equity
- The difference in
dollars between a house's value and the mortgage
amount.
- escalator clause
- The clause in a
contract permitting adjustments of the payments.
- escheat
- The reversion of
property to the state in the event the owner thereof
dies without leaving a will (intestate)
and has no heirs to whom the property may pass by
lawful descent.
- escrow
- A trust arrangement
by which none or more parties deposit things of value
with an authorized escrow agent in accordance with the
terms of a real estate agreement.
- escrow account
- (1) A third
party account that holds money safely while a sale is
in progress.
- (2) An account
used to save monies required for the payment of an
eventual debt. Often used by lenders to save for
property taxes, hazard insurance, homeowner's dues,
etc.
- Escrow accounts are
typically non-interest bearing for the contributors,
but may pay interest to the entity holding the account
(lenders, title companies, lawyers, etc.).
- estimate of value
- An appraisal; the
appraised value.
- et ux
- Abbreviation for "et
uxor", meaning "and wife".
- eviction
- Removal of a tenant
from rental property by a law enforcement officer.
First, the landlord must file and win an eviction
lawsuit, also known as an "unlawful detainer."
- exception
- As used in the
conveyance of real estate, an exception is the
exclusion of some part of the property conveyed, with
title of that excepted part remaining with the
grantor. For example, in most subdivision
developments, mineral rights are not conveyed to the
purchaser of a lot, but remain the property of the
developer. Contrast with
Reservation.
- exclusive agency
(EA)
- A listing agreement
which gives the listing agent the right to sell the
property for a specified time. The owner reserves the
right to sell the property himself without paying a
commission to the agent. Brokers run the risk of
investing their time, effort, and money in a listing
that, even if sold through their marketing efforts,
does not produce a commission. Contrast with
Exclusive Right to Sell.
- exclusive right to
sell (ERS)
- A listing agreement
which gives the listing agent the right to sell the
property for a specified time, with the right to
collect a commission if the property is sold by
anyone, including the owner, during the listing
period. Contrast with Exclusive Agency.
- exculpatory clause
- A provision in a
lease that absolves the landlord from responsibility
for all damages, injuries or losses occurring on the
property, including those caused by the landlord's
actions. Most states have laws that void exculpatory
clauses in rental agreements, which means that a court
will not enforce them.
- executor/executrix
- The man/woman
appointed in a will to carry out the requests of the
will. Contrast with
Administrator/Administratrix.
- expropriation
- See
eminent domain.
Fair Housing Act &
Fair Housing Amendments Act
- Federal laws that
prohibit housing discrimination on the basis of race
or color, national origin, religion, sex, familial
status or disability. The federal Acts apply to all
aspects of the landlord/tenant relationship, from
refusing to rent to members of certain groups to
providing different services during tenancy.
- Fair Housing Laws
- Federal, state, and
local laws, particularly Title VIII of the 1968 Civil
Rights Act, Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964,
and the Civil Rights Act of 1866, which forbid
discrimination because of race, sex, color, religion,
or national origin, in the selling or renting of homes
or apartments, and in other specified transactions.
These laws have been recently been expanded to include
familial status (having children) and disabilities
(Americans with Disabilities Act).
-
- Fannie Mae
- Created by Congress
in 1938 to bolster the housing industry during the
Depression, Fannie Mae was originally part of the
Federal
Housing Administration (FHA) and
authorized to buy only FHA-insured loans to replenish
lenders' supply of money. In 1968, Fannie Mae became a
private company operating with private capital on a
self-sustaining basis. Its role was expanded to buy
mortgages beyond traditional government loan limits,
reaching out to a broader cross-section of Americans.
-
- Today, Fannie Mae
operates under a congressional charter that directs it
to channel its efforts into increasing the
availability and affordability of homeownership for
low-, moderate-, and middle-income Americans. Fannie
Mae receives no government funding or backing, and is
one of the nation's largest taxpayers as well as one
of the most consistently profitable corporations in
America. Fannie Mae establishes strict guidelines for
mortgage loans it is willing to purchase. As the
largest buyer of mortgage loans in the US, these
guidelines have become the industry standard for the
majority of home loans. Any loan that meets these
Fannie Mae guidelines is called a "conforming loan".
-
- FDIC
- Acronym -
The
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
-
- Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC)
- The Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation's mission is to maintain the
stability of and public confidence in the nation's
financial system. To achieve this goal, the FDIC has
insured deposits and promoted safe and sound banking
practices since 1933. FDIC insurance is offered at
almost every US bank and savings and loan. In general,
the FDIC insures individual accounts in each financial
institution for a maximum of $100,000.00 per account.
An individual or entity may only be insured for a
total of $100,000.00 for all the accounts held in any
one institution, or any of its branches.
- Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA)
- FEMA is the
governmental unit that has leadership responsibilities
for the Nation's emergency management system. Once the
President has declared a major disaster, FEMA
coordinates not only its own response activities but
also those of as many as 28 other Federal agencies
that may participate. FEMA also works with States,
territories, and communities during non-disaster
periods to help plan for disasters, develop mitigation
programs, and anticipate what will be needed when
major disasters occur. Among its many
responsibilities the agency operates the Federal
Insurance Administration, which makes flood insurance
available to residents of communities that agree to
adopt and enforce sound floodplain management
practices.
- Federal Home Loan
Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC)
- See
Freddie Mac.
-
- Federal Housing
Administration
- The Federal Housing
Administration (FHA), a wholly owned government
corporation, was established under the National
Housing Act of 1934 to improve housing standards and
conditions; to provide an adequate home financing
system through insurance of mortgages; and to
stabilize the mortgage market. FHA was consolidated
into the newly established
Department of Housing and
Urban Development (HUD) in 1965. Since
1934, FHA has been extremely successful in achieving
these goals. FHA loans require special a
appraisal/inspection that determine if a property meet
the agency's minimum property standards. While
somewhat more expensive that a conventional loan in
terms of interest rates and insurance fees, FHA loans
offer slightly more liberal qualifying criteria. The
current maximum FHA loan amount in the Houston area,
for a single-family home, is $139,650.00
- fee simple estate
- The most complete
form of ownership of real property; absolute
ownership. Commonly used to to denote a property where
the owner has undivided title to the land on which the
property is situated.
- FHA
- The Federal
Housing Administration which insures mortgage
loans made by approved lenders, in accordance with FHA
regulations.
-
- FHLMC
- Acronym - Federal
Home Loan Mortgage Corporation. See
Freddie Mac.
- fiduciary
- The relationship of
trust, honesty and confidence between agent and
principal; the faithful relationship owed by an agent
to the principal.
- finder's fee
- A fee charged by real
estate brokers and apartment-finding services in
exchange for locating a rental property. These fees
are permitted by law. Some landlords, however, charge
finder's fees merely for renting a place. This type of
charge is not legitimate and, in some areas, is
specifically declared illegal.
- first mortgage
- A mortgage which is
in first lien position, taking priority over all other
liens (which are financial encumbrances).
- fixed rate
mortgage
- A mortgage with an
interest rate and monthly payment that doesn't vary
for the term of the loan.
- fixture
- Personal property
which has been attached to real estate so as to become
part of the real property. The article must meet at
least one of three conditions:
- 1. Attached in a
permanent manner.
- 2. Specially
adapted to the property. or
- 3. Intentionally
made part of the real property.
- Flood Control
District
- A special taxing
district created to provide flood control in specific
areas of a county.
- flood insurance
- A special and
separate type of homeowner's insurance the provides
coverage for damages resulting from flooding. Flood
insurance is required by most lenders only if the
property is located within a designated flood plain.
The cost of the policy is related to the associated
flooding risk. If a property has a small section of
land located within a flood plain, but away from the
residential improvements (house), the lender will
still require a policy, but its cost will be much
lower. Likewise, flood insurance policies for
properties not located within any floodplain, are
fairly inexpensive.
-
- Most flood insurance
is underwritten by the federal government through
FEMA
and the National Flood Insurance Program in
cooperation with private insurance agencies. More
than 18,000 communities participate in the Federal
flood insurance program. More than 3.8 million
National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) home and
business policies are in effect. The United States
experiences flooding threats throughout all four
seasons of the year and, in fact, flooding is the most
common natural disaster. There are, on average, 1000
floods per year in the U.S. Nearly everyone is at
some risk of experiencing the effects of flooding. In
the Houston area, 25 percent of flood-insurance claims
come from areas outside a designated flood plain.
- flood plain
- Flood plains are by
definition subject to periodic flooding. They are
generally characterized by relatively flat topography
and soil types that were laid down during past
inundations by flood waters. If your property is in
the 100-year flood plain, there is a 1-in-100 chance
in any given year that your property will flood. If it
is in the 25-year flood plain, there is a 1-in-25
chance in any given year that your property will
flood. The statistical chance of flooding is not
changed by any one flooding event; but repeated
flooding may result in the flood plain being
recalculated.
-
- A 100-year flood
plain is always wider than a 25-year flood plain, and
the 25-year flood plain is contained within the
100-year flood plain. The flood prone areas of the
United States cover approximately 150,000 square miles
or 94 million acres of land, an area roughly the size
of the State of Montana. People living in flood plains
are 26 times more likely to experience a flooding
disaster than they are a fire disaster during the life
of the 30-year mortgage on their homes.
-
- The changes in flood
plain maps reflect changes in land use (such as
increased building activity), changes in the
waterways, and flood control improvements (such as
detention ponds or other flood control measures). As
more lots are covered with more buildings and parking
lots, the amount of water that flows into creeks and
lakes increases because there is less vegetation to
absorb the water when it rains. This is one reason why
buildings that were not originally built in a flood
plain are now in the 25-year or 100-year flood plain.
- FNMA
- Usually referred to
as "Fannie Mae",
the acronym stands for the Federal National Mortgage
Association.
-
- For Sale By Owner
(FSBO)
- An individual
homeowner who is attempting to sell his property
without a real estate broker. The acronym, FSBO is
pronounced "fizzbo."
- foreclosure
- A legal process
instituted by a mortgagee or lien creditor after the
debtor's default.
- forfeiture
- The loss of property
or a privilege due to breaking a law. For example, a
landlord may forfeit his or her property to the
federal or state government if the landlord knows it
is a drug-dealing site but fails to stop the illegal
activity. Likewise, a homeowner may lose his house to
satisfy IRS debts or if the government suspects the
home was bought with money derived from criminal
acts. The government may seize and sell the property
at auction, often far below its fair market value,
before the homeowner has been allowed the due process
of a trial. If the homeowner is found not guilty, the
government is only required to pay back the amount
received at auction, and not the market value.
- fraud
- A misstatement of a
material fact made with intent to deceive or made with
reckless disregard of the truth, and which actually
does deceive.
-
- Freddie Mac
- Chartered by Congress
in 1970, Freddie Mac is a publicly held corporation
that purchases mortgages in the secondary mortgage
market. Freddie Mac came into being as the Federal
Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC) with the
mission to create a continuous flow of funds to
mortgage lenders. By supplying lenders with the money
to make mortgages and packaging the mortgages into
marketable securities which are sold to investors,
Freddie Mac also helps to sustain a stable mortgage
credit system which in turn, reduces the mortgage
rates paid by homebuyers. Over the years, Freddie Mac
has been responsible for opening the door to
homeownership for one out of six home buyers in
America who would not have qualified otherwise.
- front foot
- One linear foot (12
inches) along the street side of a lot.
- FSBO
- Acronym -
For Sale By Owner
- functional
obsolescence
- Loss of value of real
property caused by modernization or changing tastes or
standards; e.g.. single bath, inadequate closet space,
etc. Contrast with economic
obsolescence.
- garden home
- See
patio home
- gated community
- A neighborhood or
group of neighborhoods, usually surrounded by masonary
walls, restricting access through the use of a manned
guard station or electronically operated gates. The
electronic gates may be opened through the use of
individual remote controls and/or a numeric keypad and
code. Some gated communities restrict entry at all
times, while others only limit access during the
evening hours. The City of Houston does not allow
public city streets to be gated off, so only
neighborhoods with private streets, may have
restricted access. The costs associated with
maintaining a manned guard gate can significantly
impact monthly maintenance fees, depending on the size
of the community.
- general lien
- A lien that includes
all the property owned by a debtor, rather than a
specific property. Contrast with Specific Lien.
- general warranty
deed
- A deed in which the
grantor fully warrants good and clear title to the
property. A general warranty deed offers the most
protection of any deed.
-
- Ginnie Mae
- The common nickname
for the Government National Mortgage Association.
Ginnie Mae was created in 1968 as a wholly owned
corporation within the Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD), having been separated from Fannie
Mae. Ginnie Mae does not loan money for mortgages.
Instead, it operate in the secondary mortgage market,
buying loans and selling mortgage-backed securities
investors, which in turn, increases the availability
of mortgage credit.
-
- Government
National Mortgage Association
- See
Ginnie Mae.
-
- GNMA
- Acronym - Government
National Mortgage Association, also known as "Ginnie
Mae"
- good faith
estimate
- A written estimate of
closing costs which a lender must provide you within
three days of submitting an application.
- government survey
method
- A system of land
description (not used in Texas) which uses meridians
(north and south lines) and base lines (east and west
lines). Areas include quadrangles (24 miles on each
side), townships (6 miles on each side), and sections
(1 mile on each side). Also known as the Rectangular
Survey Method. Contrast with
metes and bounds, and
recorded plat
(Lot and Block Number) method.
- grace period
- A period of time
during which a loan payment may be paid after its due
date but not incur a late penalty. Such late payments
may be reported on your credit report.
-
- grant deed
- A deed containing an
implied promise that the person transfering the
property actually owns the title and that it is not
encumbered in any way, except as described in the
deed. This is the most commonly used type of deed.
Compare quitclaim
deed.
- grantee
- A person to whom real
estate is conveyed; the buyer.
- grantor
- A person conveying
real estate by deed; the seller.
- gross debt service
- The amount of money
needed to pay principal, interest and taxes, and
sometimes energy costs. If the dwelling unit is a
condominium, all or a portion of common fees are
excluded, depending on what expenses are covered.
- gross income
- For qualifying
purposes, the income of the borrower before taxes or
expenses are deducted.
- gross lease
- A commercial real
estate lease in which the tenant pays a fixed amount
of rent per month or year, regardless of the
landlord's operating costs, such as maintenance, taxes
and insurance. A gross lease closely resembles the
typical residential lease. The tenant may agree to a
"gross lease with stops," meaning that the tenant will
pitch in if the landlord's operating costs rise above
a certain level. In real estate lingo, the point when
the tenant starts to contribute is called the "stop
level," because that’s where the landlord’s share of
the costs stops. Contrast with
Net Lease.
- habendum clause
- The "to have and
hold" clause which defines or limits the quantity of
the estate granted in the premises of the deed.
- hazard insurance
- A contract between
purchaser and an insurer, to compensate the insured
for loss of property due to hazards (fire, hail
damage, etc.), for a premium. Most common, lender
required feature of
homeowners insurance.
- hereditaments
- Property, personal
and real, capable of being inherited.
-
- high-rise
- A nine-story or
taller building containing residential apartments or
condominium units. In addition to spectacular views,
most high-rises offer their residents a full range of
amenities. Building features may include 24-hour
concierge service, swimming pools, spas, saunas,
tennis courts, exercise areas, party rooms and guest
suites. Security is enhanced at these buildings by
the manned entry desks and limited access, covered
parking garages. Compare with
mid-rise.
- highest and best
use
- The particular use of
a real property which will produce the greatest
financial return. The optimum use of a site as used in
appraisal. This is often determined by location,
neighboring properties,
deed restrictions and local
zoning regulations. A home built on a busy
street, surrounded by commercial property, and not
restricted from other development, is not fulfilling
its highest and best use. Once the property is
redeveloped into commercial property, it can meet it
economic potential.
-
- HOA
- Acronym -
homeowner's
association
- hold harmless
- In a contract, a
promise by one party not to hold the other party
responsible if the other party carries out the
contract in a way that causes damage to the first
party. For example, many leases include a hold
harmless clause in which the tenant agrees not to sue
the landlord if the tenant is injured due to the
landlord’s failure to maintain the premises. In most
states, these clauses are illegal in residential
tenancies, but may be upheld in commercial settings.
- home equity loan
- A fixed or adjustable
rate loan obtained for a variety of purposes, secured
by the equity in your home. Interest paid is usually
tax-deductible. Often used for home improvement or
freeing of equity for investment in other real estate
or investment. Recommended by many to replace or
substitute for consumer loans whose interest is not
tax-deductible, such as auto or boat loans, credit
card debt, medical debt, and education loans. Home
equity loans were recently made available in Texas due
to changes the homestead laws as of January 1, 1999.
-
- home warranty
- A service contract
that covers a major housing system--for example,
plumbing or electrical wiring--for a set period of
time from the date a house is sold. The warranty
guarantees repairs to the covered system and is
renewable. A basic, one year Buyer's warranty costs
$295 to $350 with additional coverage available for
garage door openers, spas, swimming pools, sprinkler
system and other appliances.
-
- homeowners'
association (HOA)
- An organization
comprising neighbors concerned with managing the
common areas of a subdivision or condominium complex.
These associations take on issues such as maintaining
common land and recreation areas, and collecting dues
from residents. The homeowners' association is also
responsible for enforcing any covenants, conditions &
restrictions that apply to the property. Payment of
dues and participation in the homeowner's association
may be either voluntary or mandatory, depending on the
neighborhood.
- homeowners'
insurance
- A type of insurance
policy designed to protect homeowners from financial
losses related the ownership of real property. In
addition to covering losses due to vandalism, fire,
hail, etc.(hazard
insurance), most policies also provide
theft and liability coverage. Flood related damage
requires a separate flood insurance
policy or rider.
- homestead
- (1) The house
in which a family lives, plus any adjoining land and
other buildings on that land.
- (2) Land, and
the improvements thereon, designated by the owner as
his homestead and, therefore, protected by state law
from forced sale by certain creditors of the owner.
Texas offers homestead protection for a single
residential property. In addition, Texas mandates a
minimum $15,000 school district property tax exemption
on the appraised value of a homestead property. Other
taxing authorities, such as cities and counties, may
offer additional property tax exemptions on
homesteads. Homestead protection will not stop
foreclosures for
deliquent mortgages,
taxes or mandatory
homeowner's
association dues.
- (3) Land
acquired out of the public lands of the United States.
The term "homesteaders" refers to people who got their
land by settling it and making it productive, rather
than purchasing it outright.
-
- house closing
- The final transfer of
the ownership of a house from the seller to the buyer,
which occurs after both have met all the terms of
their contract and the deed has been recorded. Also
known as just "closing".
- Housing and Urban
Development, Deparment of (HUD)
- The U.S. Department
of Housing and Urban Development. This is the agency
responsible for enforcing the federal
Fair Housing Act.
- HUD
- Acronym -
Housing and Urban
Development.
implied warranty of
habitability
- A legal doctrine that
requires landlords to offer and maintain livable
premises for their tenants. If a landlord fails to
provide habitable housing, tenants in most states may
legally withhold rent or take other measures,
including hiring someone to fix the problem or moving
out. See
constructive eviction.
- improvements
- Valuable additions to
the land, such as buildings, fences, roads, etc.,
which increase the value of the property.
- incidents of
ownership
- Any control over
property. If you give away property but keep an
incident of ownership--for example, you give away an
apartment building but retain the right to receive
rent--then legally, no gift has been made. This
distinction can be important if you're making large
gifts to reduce your eventual estate tax.
- income approach to
value
- An estimate of value
based on the monetary returns that a property can be
expected to generate; capitalization. Contrast with
the cost approach to
value and the
market data approach to
value.
- Independent School
District
- In Texas, all but one
of the state's school districts are considered
"Independent" since they do not fall under the direct
control of any other local government, and their
boundaries are not constrained by any city or county
border lines. Each district is run by an elected
school board, which appoints a superintendent and sets
budgets and tax rates. Only the State of Texas has
the authority to regulate and oversee the actions of
an Independent School District.
-
- The one exception is
the Stafford Municipal School District, which
de-annexed itself from the Fort Bend Independent
School District. Stafford MSD lies entirely within
the city limits of the City of Stafford, and shares
its recreational and auditorium facilities.
- index
- A number, usually a
percentage, upon which future interest rates for
adjustable rate mortgages are based.
- ingress
- An entrance, or the
act of entering. Compare
egress.
- inspection clause
- A stipulation in an
offer to purchase that makes the sale contingent on
the findings of a home inspector.
- insurable title
- A title which a title
company will insure.
- interest
- (1) The sum
paid in return for the use of money; could be
considered rent for the use of money.
- (2) The type
and extent of ownership in property.
- interest rate
- The periodic charge,
expressed as a percentage, for use of credit.
- intermediary
- As of January 1,
1996, a broker may act as an intermediary between the
parties if the broker complies with the The Texas Real
Estate License Act. The broker must obtain the written
consent of each party to the transaction to act as an
intermediary. The written consent must state who will
pay the broker and, in conspicuous bold or underlined
print, set forth the broker's obligations as an
intermediary. The broker is required to treat each
party honestly and fairly and to comply with The Texas
Real Estate License Act. A broker who acts as an
intermediary in a transaction:
- (1) shall
treat all parties honestly;
- (2) may not
disclose that the owner will accept a price less
than than the asking price unless authorized in
writing to do so by the owner;
- (3) may not
disclose that the buyer will pay a price greater
than the price submitted in a written offer unless
authorized in writing to do so by the buyer; and
- (4) may not
disclose any confidential information or any
information that a party specifically instructs the
broker in writing not to disclose unless authorized
in writing to disclose the information or required
to do so by The Texas Real Estate License act or a
court order or if the information materially relates
to the condition of the property.
- With the parties'
consent, a broker acting as an intermediary between
the parties may appoint a person who is licensed under
The Texas Real Estate License Act and associated with
the broker to communicate with and carry out
instructions of one party and another person who is
licensed under the Act and associated with the broker
to communicate with and carry out instructions of the
other party.
- intestate
- Legal designation of
a person who has died without leaving a valid will.
- intimidation
- As defined in the
fair housing laws, it is the illegal act of coercing,
intimidating, threatening, or interfering with a
person in exercising or enjoying any right granted or
protected by federal, state or local fair housing
laws.
- invitee
- A business guest, or
someone who enters property held open to members of
the public, such as a visitor to a museum. Property
owners must protect invitees from dangers on the
property. In an example of the perversion of legalese,
social guests that you invite into your home are
called "licensees."
- joint tenancy
- A way for two or more
people to share ownership of real estate or other
property. When two or more people own property as
joint tenants and one owner dies, the other owners
automatically own the deceased owner's share. For
example, if a parent and child own a house as joint
tenants and the parent dies, the child automatically
becomes full owner. Because of this right of
survivorship, no will is required to transfer the
property; it goes directly to the surviving joint
tenants without the delay and costs of probate.
Contrast with tenancy in
common.
- judgment
- The official and
authentic decision of a court of justice concerning
the respective rights and claims of the parties to an
action or suit.
- laches
- Delay or negligence
in asserting one's rights.
- landlord
- The owner of any real
estate, such as a house, apartment building or land,
that is leased or rented to another person, called the
tenant.
- latent defect
- Hidden structural
defects and flaws.
- lease
- An oral or written
agreement (a contract) between two people concerning
the use by one of the property of the other. A person
can lease real estate
(such as an apartment or business property) or
personal property
(such as a car or a boat). A lease should cover basic
issues such as when the lease will begin and end, the
rent or other costs, how payments should be made, and
any restrictions on the use of the property. The
property owner is often called the "lessor,"
and the person using the property is called the "lessee."
In Texas, any lease over one year in length, must be
in writing.
- lease option
- A contract in which
an owner leases his house (usually for one to five
years) to a tenant for a specific monthly rent, and
which gives the tenant the right to buy the house at
the end of the lease period for a price established in
advance. This allows a potential home buyer move into
a house he may wish to eventually buy without having
to come up with a down payment or financing at that
time.
- lease purchase
- A contract in which
an owner leases his house (usually for one to five
years) to a tenant for an increased monthly rent, and
which gives the tenant the right to buy the house at
the end of the lease period for a price established in
advance, with the incremental rent increase being used
to form a down payment. Buyers should be wary of this
type of contract since they may lose their extra
rent/down payment money should the owner suffer
financial setbacks before the purchase has been
completed.
-
- leasehold estate
- A form of real estate
in which a tenant is allowed to construct permanent
structures upon a parcel of leased land, and derive
some use or income from said structures during the
period of the lease. Leasehold estates usually
involve long-term leases, ranging from 20 to 99
years. Land owners are able to have their property
developed, with no out of pocket expenses. Instead of
having to sell their land too soon, they retain their
family's rights to the land, while receiving a steady
income stream. The tenant saves the initial land
acquisation costs and may gain access to property that
would be otherwise unavailable. The downside is, as
the lease nears the end or its term, the tenant's
investment becomes uncertain, and the landlord is in a
position to make demands for compensation, above the
fair market price. Leaseholds are much more common in
commercial real estate, but can apply to some
residential properties as well. Hawaii has many
leasehold condominium projects, and even Houston has
at least one mid-rise condominium building that lacks
ownership of the land it occupies.
- legal description
- A description of a
specific parcel of real estate which is acceptable to
the courts in that state, and which will allows an
independent surveyor to locate and identify it.
Usually it uses one of the following methods;
government survey
(Not Used in Texas), metes
and bounds, or
recorded plat (lot and block number).
- less favorable
treatment
- Any time a person is
treated differently on the basis of race, sex,
religion, color, familial status, disability, or
national origin, either by action or inaction, in the
selling or leasing of real property, it is a violation
of the Fair Housing Laws.
Also known as unequal treatment or different
treatment.
- lessee
- Tenant leasing
property.
- lessor
- One who leases
property to a tenant.
- leverage
- The use of borrowed
funds to finance an investment and to magnify the rate
of return.
-
- Levy Improvement
District (LID)
- A type of Water
Control and Improvement District, used to build and
maintain levies. Levies are used to contain flooding
creeks and rivers.
- licensee
- A person licensed by
the Texas Real Estate Commission to engage in real
estate brokerage, either as a broker or as a salesman.
- LID
- Acronym -
Levy Improvement
District.
- lien
- A monetary claim
against a property. These should be settled before the
sale is finalized.
- lien theory state
- Texas is a Lien
Theory State, where legal title of mortgaged property
resides with the mortgagor (borrower), with the
mortgage as a lien against the property. Contrast with
title theory state.
- life estate
- An interest in
property only for the duration of someone's life.
- life tenant
- One who has a life
estate in real property.
- limited equity
housing
- An arrangement
designed to encourage low-and moderate-income families
to purchase housing, in which the housing is offered
at an extremely favorable price with a low down
payment. The catch is that when the owner sells, she
gets none of the profit if the market value of the
unit has gone up. Any profit returns to the
organization that built the home, which then resells
the unit at an affordable price.
- lis pendens
- A notice indicating
that legal action is pending on a property.
- listing agreement
- The legal agreement
between the listing agent/broker and the vendor,
setting out the services to be rendered, describing
the property for sale, and stating the terms of
payment.
-
- loan-to-value
ratio (LTV)
- The ratio of the
amount being loaned in respect to the appraised value
of the property, usually expressed as a percentage.
If a buyer was putting down $20,000, and borrowing a
first lien of $180,000, on a $200,000 property, then
the loan would have a 90% LTV. Loan-to-value ratios
can effect interest rates, loan qualifying criteria,
and lender requirements for
PMI
and escrow accounts.
- lock or lock In
- A commitment you
obtain from a lender assuring you a particular
interest rate or feature or a definite time period.
Provides protection should interest rates rise between
the time you apply for a loan, acquire loan approval,
and, subsequently, close the loan and receive the
funds you have borrowed.
-
- loft
- (1) A style of
residential construction. In Houston the term "loft"
is used quite liberally. It may refer to an older
building that has been converted into residential
condominiums, or it may mean a new mid-rise project
with a "loft-style" finish to the units. There are
also new construction townhomes that are promoted as
being "lofts". A builder creates new loft space by
leaving exposed brick walls, bare polished concrete
floors and having unhidden heating ducts, trusses,
etc.
- (2) An
upstairs room or area that has an open wall,
overlooking a room or area below.
-
- LTV
- See
loan-to-value ratio.
- mandatory
continuing education (MCE)
- The State of Texas
requires that its licensed real estate brokers, and
salesmen (who have met their SAE requirement), attend
at least 15 hours of certified real estate education
courses before each license renewal (every two
years). At least six of the 15 hours must be in legal
topics.
- manufactured home
- A structure built in
a factory, that is later shipped to, and placed on,
the homesite. The term can apply to both mobile homes
and pre-fab homes.
- margin
- An amount, usually a
percentage, which is added to the index to determine
the interest rate for adjustable rate mortgages.
- marginal land
- Property which is
barely profitable to use.
- market approach to
value
- An estimate of value
based on the actual sales prices of comparable
properties. Contrast with
cost approach to value
and income
approach to value.
- market value
- The price that a
willing buyer and a willing seller, both given full
information, and neither under pressure to act, would
agree upon. Also known as Fair Market Value.
-
- master-planned
community
- A large scale, mixed
use, real estate development that follows a long term,
comprehensive plan. Master-planned communities
typically blend different price ranges of residential
neighborhoods with some commercial properties designed
to serve the residents' needs. Residential properties
may include patio homes, townhouses, condominiums and
apartment complexes in addition to neighborhoods of
single-family homes. Likewise, multiple home builders
are included in the construction of the various
neighborhoods. Commercial development can consist of
retail strip centers ans shopping malls, restaurants,
entertainment venues and office buildings.
-
- In addition,
master-planned communities usually offer amenities
such as public recreation areas and parks,
neighborhood schools and extensive landscaping.
Recreation areas may include public swimming pools,
tennis courts, children's play grounds and sports
fields. Many offer large water features and public or
private golf courses.
- The term
"master-planned" has become somewhat of an overused
buzzword in the current market place. True
master-planned communities require a a multi-year
commitment from the developer and contain thousands of
homes.
- MCE
- See
mandatory
continuing education.
- mechanic's lien
- A legal claim placed
on real estate by someone who is owed money for labor,
services or supplies contributed to the property for
the purpose of improving it. Typical lien claimants
are general contractors, subcontractors and suppliers
of building materials. A mechanics' lien claimant can
sue to have the real estate sold at auction and
recover the debt from the proceeds. Because property
with a lien on it cannot be easily sold until the lien
is satisfied (paid off), owners have a great incentive
to pay their bills.
- mediation
- A dispute resolution
method designed to help warring parties resolve their
own dispute without going to court. In mediation, a
neutral third party (the mediator) meets with the
opposing sides to help them find a mutually
satisfactory solution. Unlike a judge in her courtroom
or an arbitrator conducting a binding arbitration, the
mediator has no power to impose a solution. No formal
rules of evidence or procedure control mediation; the
mediator and the parties usually agree on their own
informal ways to proceed.
- metes and bounds
- A system of land
description using distance (metes) and angles/compass
directions (bounds), beginning and ending at the same
point. Contrast with
government survey
and recorded plat method.
- mid-rise
- A 4-story to 8-story
tall building that contains residential apartment or
condominium units. While not offering the panoramic
views of a high-rise,
mid-rise buildings can offer comparable levels of
amenities and services. Building features may include
24-hour concierge service, swimming pools, spas,
saunas, tennis courts, exercise areas, and party
rooms. Security is enhanced at these buildings by the
manned entry desks and limited access, covered parking
garages.
- mineral rights
- An ownership interest
in the minerals contained in a particular parcel of
land, with or without ownership of the surface of the
land. The owner of mineral rights is usually entitled
to either take the minerals from the land himself or
receive a royalty from the party that actually
extracts the minerals.
- minimum payment
- The minimum amount
that you must pay, usually monthly, on a home equity
loan or line of credit. In some plans, the minimum
payment may be "interest only," (simple interest). In
other plans, the minimum payment may include principal
and interest (amortized).
- minority
- As defined in the
Civil Rights Act of 1968 as part of the Fair Housing
Laws "'minority' means any group, or any member of a
group, that can be identified either: (1) by
race, color, religion, sex, disability, or national
origin; or (2) by any other characteristic
(such as familial status) on the basis of which
discrimination is prohibited by a federal, state, or
local fair housing law.
- misrepresentation
- A false statement, or
concealment, of material fact with the intention of
inducing action of another.
- mobile home
- A type of
manufactured home, that is transported to the home
site using wheels attached to the structure. Mobile
homes come in various widths and lengths, and maybe
composed of one to three pieces. A one piece home is
called a "single-wide", while a house that is joined
together from two halves is called a "double-wide".
Recently, "triple-wides" have appeared, and become as
the largest mobile homes available. Most sections are
between 14 and 16 feet wide, and 54 to 80 feet in
length. Mobile homes do not require any foundation or
substructure. They sit up off the ground, with
skirting used around the base to hide the wheel and
jacks. While it is possible to tie down a mobile home
to a piece of land, using straps and screw-in anchors,
the structures are very susceptible to high winds and
tornados.
- month-to-month
tenancy
- A rental agreement
that provides for a one-month tenancy that is
automatically renewed each month unless either tenant
or landlord gives the other the proper amount of
written notice (usually 30 days) to terminate the
agreement. Some landlords prefer to use month-to-month
tenancies because it gives them the right to raise the
rent after giving proper notice. This type of rental
also provides a landlord with an easy way to get rid
of troublesome tenants, because in most states
month-to-month tenancies can be terminated for any
reason. It is also common for leases to revert to
month-to-month tenancies at the end of the original
lease period, if another lease has not been signed.
- monument
- A fixed object or
point, either natural or man-made, used in making a
survey.
- mortgage
- A contract providing
security for the repayment of a loan, registered
against property, with stated rights and remedies in
the event of default. Lenders consider both the
property (security) and financial worth of the
borrower (covenant) in deciding on a mortgage loan.
- mortgage banker
- Originates mortgage
loans, loaning you their funds and closing the loan in
their name.
- mortgage broker
- A person or company
having contacts with financial institutions or
individuals wishing to invest in mortgages.
- mortgage loan
- A loan which utilizes
real estate as security or collateral to provide for
repayment should you default on the terms of your
loan. The mortgage or deed of
trust is your agreement to pledge your
home or other real estate as security.
- mortgagee
- The lender in a
mortgage loan transaction.
- mortgagor
- The borrower in a
mortgage loan transaction.
- MUD
- See
Municipal
Utility District.
- Multiple Listing
Service (MLS)
- A system by which a
number of real estate firms share information about
homes that are for sale. Membership usually provides
a monthly book and/or computer service that provides
Realtors® with
detailed listings of most homes currently on the
market.
- Municipal Utility
District (MUD)
- Municipal Utility
Districts are authorized under the Texas Constitution,
Article III, Section 52, or Article XVI, Section 59.
They are local political subdivisions of the State,
governed by a board of directors. After the terrible
floods in Texas during 1912-14, people across the
state realized there was a real need to confirm the
State's duty to not only prevent floods but, also
through the storage of flood waters, to conserve the
water for beneficial usages. This was the genesis for
the passage of Section 59 of Article XVI in 1917,
which allowed water districts to operate with
unlimited bonded indebtedness. In 1925, legislation
was passed which authorized the creation of Water
Control and Improvement Districts -- WCIDs -- with the
same bonded indebtedness and taxing authority.
-
- To create a new water
district, a developer files an application through the
Office of the State Attorney General to the
TNRCC. The application outlines the
developer's plans for providing various services such
as water, sewer and drainage to areas where municipal
services are not already in place. A Board of
Directors is established, which is assisted by
qualified professionals who provide services on a fee
basis. Not all water districts are created equal.
Some are established under General Law by theTexas
Natural Resource Conservation Commission (TNRCC);
some by Commissioners Court; and others are created by
the governing board of a city. Special law districts
are created by an act of the State Legislature. All
water districts, however, must comply with the laws
contained in the Texas Water Code.
-
- Water districts are
generally empowered to incur debt and levy taxes. If
voters approve unlimited tax bonds, a debt service tax
to pay the bonds is also approved. Each year, the
water district board is obligated to levy a property
tax adequate to cover the debt. This tax is levied on
all property in the district based on appraised value,
regardless of services received, and must comply with
the Property Tax Code. The tax rate must be published
each year and public hearings held if the effective
tax rate increases more than three percent over the
previous year. District voters may also approve a
maintenance tax. Water districts must comply with the
Texas Open Meetings Act and the Texas Open Records Act
and have an annual audit performed by an independent
auditing firm. Water districts are generally
empowered to:
- negative
amortization
- Amortization in which
the payment made is insufficient to fund complete
repayment of the loan at its termination. Usually
occurs when the increase in the monthly payment is
limited by a ceiling. The portion of the payment which
should be paid is added to the remaining balance owed.
The balance owed may increase, rather than decrease
over the life of the loan.
- net lease
- A commercial real
estate lease in which the tenant regularly pays not
only for the space (as he does with a gross lease) but
for a portion of the landlord’s operating costs as
well. When all three of the usual costs--taxes,
maintenance and insurance--are passed on, the
arrangement is known as a "triple net lease." Because
these costs are variable and almost never decrease, a
net lease favors the landlord. Accordingly, it may be
possible for a tenant to bargain for a net lease with
caps or ceilings, which limits the amount of rent the
tenant must pay. For example, a net lease with caps
may specify that an increase in taxes beyond a certain
point (or any new taxes) will be paid by the landlord.
The same kind of protection can be designed to cover
increased insurance premiums and maintenance
expenses. Contrast with gross
lease.
- net listing
- A price, which must
be expressly agreed upon, below which the owner will
not sell the property and at which the broker will not
receive a commission; the broker receives the excess
over and above the net listing price as commission.
The broker in this type of listing will have a very
hard time maintaining his fiduciary responsibilities
to his seller since his interests are potentially at
odds with the interests of the seller.
- non-escrowing loan
- Typically, mortgage
lenders require escrow accounts for property taxes,
hazard insurance, and sometimes, homeowner's
association dues. Monthly contributions to these
accounts are rolled into a lender's mortgage payment.
In Texas, escrow accounts are non-interest bearing, so
many borrowers prefer the option of keeping the monies
for their hazard insurance and property taxes in their
own interest bearing accounts, until they become due.
Most lenders only allow non-escrowing loans on
mortgages with an 80% or lower, loan-to-value ratio.
- Property taxes can be
paid as late as January 31st of the following year
before interest and penalties begin to accrue. If the
borrower has the discipline to save the monies for
taxes and insurance independently, a non-escrowing
loan would be the smart choice. Most lenders charge a
one-time fee at closing for selecting the non-escrow
option. Non-escrowing loans also have lower closing
costs since the lender does not collect reserves,
which place a 2-3 month cushion of pro-rated payments
in the escrow account. Additionally, the seller's
pro-rated share of the year's property taxes is
applied directly to the buyer's closing costs, instead
of being placed into the escrow account.
- note
- A written instrument
of credit attesting to a debt and promise to pay.
- nuisance
- Something that
interferes with the use of property by being
irritating, offensive, obstructive or dangerous.
Nuisances include a wide range of conditions,
everything from a chemical plant's noxious odors to a
neighbor's dog barking. The former would be a "public
nuisance," one affecting many people, while the other
would be a "private nuisance," limited to making your
life difficult, unless the dog was bothering others.
Lawsuits may be brought to abate (remove or reduce) a
nuisance. See quiet
enjoyment,
attractive nuisance.
- obsolescence
- A loss in value of
real property caused by changes either internal or
external to the property. See
economic obsolescence,
functional obsolescence,
and physical deterioration.
- offer
- A proposal to enter
into an agreement with another person. An offer must
express the intent of the person making the offer to
form a contract, must contain some essential
terms--including the price and subject matter of the
contract--and must be communicated by the person
making the offer. A legally valid acceptance of the
offer will create a binding contract.
- open house
- An opportunity for
prospective buyers to view a house in a low pressure
environment.
- open listing
- A listing under which
the principal (owner) reserves the right to list his
property with other brokers.
- option
- The right to purchase
property within a definite time at a specified price.
There is no obligation to purchase, but the seller is
obligated to sell if the option holder exercise the
right to purchase. For the option to be valid, it must
include consideration.
- option fee
- An amount of money
payed by a prospective Buyer, to a Seller, in order to
obtain an option period, as specified in Paragraph 7
of a TREC promulagated earnest money contract. If a
Buyer decides to close on the property, the option fee
may be credited to his funds at closing.
- option period
- Current residential
earnest money contracts, promulagated by the Texas
Real Estate Commission offer the choice of an option
period, under Paragraph 7. During this period, the
length of which is negotiable, the Buyer has a right
to inspect the property and has an absolute right to
terminate the offer/contract for any reason, without
penalty. In exchange for this option period, the
Buyer pays an option fee to the Seller. If the Buyer
decides to continue with the sale of the property,
this option fee may be credited to him at closing.
Typical option periods run from 7 to 14 days long.
- ordinance
- A law adopted by a
town or city council, county board of supervisors or
other municipal governing board. Typically, local
governments issue ordinances establishing zoning and
parking rules and regulating noise, garbage removal,
and the operation of parks and other areas that affect
people who live or do business within the locality's
borders.
- origination fee
- A fee charged by
lenders, in addition to interest, for services in
connection with granting of a loan. Usually a
percentage of the loan amount.
- panic peddling
- The illegal practice
of inducing panic selling in a neighborhood by making
representations of the entry, or prospective entry, of
members of a minority group;
blockbusting. See
Fair Housing.
- party wall
- Wall erected on line
between adjoining properties for the use of both
properties.
- patio home
- A single-family home
that sits on a small lot, often with one outside wall
of the structure sitting on the property line. Patio
homes have no common structural walls with adjoining
propeties, but their zero
lot line wall may form part of their
neighbors backyard fence/wall. These properties often
have a small back or side yard large enough for a
patio or garden area. Also known as a garden home.
- percentage lease
- Lease in which all or
part of rental is a specified percentage of gross
income from total sales made upon the premises.
- person
- An individual, a
partnership, or a corporation, foreign or domestic.
- personal property
- Property which is
tangible, movable, and not fixed to the land. Also
called chattel and personalty. Contrast with
real property.
- personalty
- Personal property;
chattel. Contrast with Realty.
- physical
deterioration
- The loss of value to
real property from all causes due to the action of the
elements and old age. Physical deterioration can be
either curable or incurable.
- PITI
- Principal, Interest,
Taxes and Insurance.
- planned unit
development (PUD)
- In a PUD, the planned
unit development association owns and maintains
property in a real property development project for
the benefit of its members, who are owners of
individual parcels of real property in the development
and are members of the association because of that
ownership. The level of services and fees are similar
to a condominium complex, but since each owner has
title to a specific parcel of land, lenders may treat
units as non-condominiums. This allows higher LTV
loans and eliminates owner occupancy percentage
requirements.
- plat book
- A record of recorded
subdivisions of land.
- PMI
- Acronym -
private mortgage
insurance.
- points
- Fees paid to induce
lenders to make mortgage loans at a particular
interest rate. Each point is equal to one percent (1%)
of the loan principal. Same as
discount points.
- police power
- The authority of a
government to adopt and enforce law governing the use
of real estate based on the need to promote public
safety, health, and general welfare.
- power of attorney
(POA)
- A written
authorization by a person to another person to act for
him on his behalf.
- prepayment
- Paying off all or
part of the mortgage before the scheduled date.
- prepayment clause
in a mortgage
- Statement of the
terms upon which the mortgagor (borrower) may pay the
entire or stated amount on the mortgage principal at
some time prior to the due date.
- prepayment penalty
- A fee paid to the
lending institution for paying a loan prior to the
scheduled maturity date.
- primary mortgage
market
- Lenders who originate
loans and makes funds available directly to the
borrowers. Contrast with
secondary mortgage
market.
- prime rate
- The interest, or
discount rate charged by a commercial bank to its
largest and strongest customers.
- principal
- The amount of money
owed to the lender not including interest.
- principle of
conformity
- An appraisal
principle which holds that the maximum value is
realized when a reasonable degree of homogeneity
(sameness) exists in a neighborhood.
- private mortgage
insurance (PMI)
- Default insurance on
conventional loans, normally insuring the top 20%-25%
of the loan and not the whole loan.
- promulgated
contracts
- The Texas Real Estate
Commission has prepared and authorized various
standard contracts which must be used by all licensees
when acting as agents in real estate transactions with
limited exceptions.
- property taxes
- Taxes that are paid
yearly on real property. Property taxes are ad
valorem, based on the assessed value of the real
property. In Texas the assessed value is determined
by the County Appraisal District. Each taxing
authority multiplies this appraised value by its
annual tax rate. Taxing authorities include local
school districts, counties, cities, water districts(MUD's,
PUD's,
LID's, etc.),
and other special tax districts.
- pro-rate
- To divide or
distribute proportionally. At closing, various
expenses such as taxes, insurance, interest, rents,
etc. are prorated between the seller and buyer.
- Public Utility
District (PUD)
- A water district,
created by a city or county, promoting development of
a designated area by providing water and sewer
services. The PUD operates in the same manner as a
Municipal
Utility District, but is created by a
local government, not a private developer.
- PUD
- Acronym -
planned unit
development.
- Acronym -
Public Utility
District.
- puffing
- Non-factual or
extravagant statements and opinions made to enhance
the perceived desirability of a property. The is a
fine line between legal puffing and illegal
misrepresentation, and puffing is best avoided. An
example of puffing would be, "This home has the best
view in the city". Also known as puffery.
- purchase offer
- A document that lists
the price, terms and conditions under which a buyer is
willing to purchase a property.
- qualify
- To meet a mortgage
lender's approval requirements.
- qualifying ratios
- Comparisons of a
borrower's debts and gross monthly income.
- quiet enjoyment
- The right of a
property owner or tenant to enjoy his or her property
without interference. Disruption of quiet enjoyment
may constitute a nuisance.
Leases and rental agreements often contain a "covenant
of quiet enjoyment," expressly obligating the landlord
to see that tenants have the opportunity to live
undisturbed.
- quitclaim deed
- A deed that transfers
whatever ownership interest the transferor has in a
particular property. The deed does not guarantee
anything about what is being transferred, including an
actual ownership interest. For example, a divorcing
husband may quitclaim his interest in certain real
estate to his ex-wife, officially giving up any legal
interest in the property. A quit claim deed may also
be used to clear up a cloud on the title to the
property in cases where there is a question of a
possible ownership claim. Compare with
grant deed.
- ready, willing and
able
- A buyer who is
prepared to buy on the seller's terms and has the
financial capacity to do so.
- real estate
- Refers to land and
improvements and the rights to own or use them. "A
leasehold, as well as any other interest or estate in
land, whether corporeal, incorporeal, freehold, or
non-freehold, and whether the real estate is situated
in this state or elsewhere." {TRELA, Section 2(1)} In
popular usage, Real Estate is used interchangeably
with real property
and realty.
- real estate board
- A non profit
organization representing local real estate
agents/brokers and salespeople, which provides
services to its members and maintains and operates the
Multiple Listing Service in the community.
- real estate agent
- A person licensed to
negotiate and transact the sale of real estate on
behalf of the property owner.
- Real Estate
Appraiser, licensed
- A person licensed to
legally appraise real estate property for a fee.
Texas has required its appraiser be licensed since
1939. In 1991 the responsibility for licensing real
estate appraisers was transfered from the Texas Real
Estate Commission to a newly formed Texas Appraiser
Licensing and Certification Board (TALCB). There are
several classes of licensed real estate appraisers,
with the highest classification - Certified General RE
Appraiser, requiring a minimum of 180 classroom hours,
and 3,000 hours appraisal work over at least 2˝ years.
- Real Estate
Broker, licensed
- To be eligible to
apply for a real estate Broker License, an individual
must have not less than two (2) years active
experience in Texas as a licensed real estate
salesperson and 180 classroom hours of core real
estate coursesplus an additional 720 classroom hours
in related courses acceptable to the Commission. The
applicant must also pass the
TREC Real Estate Broker's exam, and then
continue to maintain his license with mandatory
continuing education (MCE) courses .
- Real Estate Center
- In 1971, the Texas
Real Estate Research Center was created by the state
legislature. It is located on the campus of Texas A&M
University, and is part of the Lowry Mays College and
Graduate School of Business. Today, the shortened
"Real Estate Center" name is used. The mission of the
Real Estate Center is to conduct real estate related
research based on needs of the Texas citizenry and
disseminate the results and findings.
- Real Estate
Inspector, licensed
- A Licensed Real
Estate Inspector is someone who is licensed by
TREC who holds himself out
to the public as being trained and qualified to
inspect property. Formerly known as Registered Real
Estate Inspector before January 1, 1996.
- Real Estate
Salesperson, licensed
- To be eligible to
apply for a real estate Salesperson License, an
individual must complete core education courses in
Principles of Real Estate , Law of Agency and Law of
Contracts. An additional six (6) semester (90
classroom) hours must be completed in core courses or
in related courses acceptable to the Commission. The
applicant must also pass the
TREC Real Estate Salesperson's exam, and
then continue to maintain his license with mandatory
continuing education (MCE) courses. Recently licensed
real estate salespersons are required to complete a
total of 18 semester (270 classroom) hours of
education by the end of their third year of licensure,
taking at least 30 hours per year.
- real property
- Refers to the right
to own land and improvements. Commonly used
interchangeably with Real Estate and Realty. Contrast
with personal property.
- REALTOR®
- A real estate broker
or an associate who holds active membership in a local
real estate board that is affiliated with the
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®.
- realty
- Refers to land and
buildings and other improvements from a physical
standpoint. Real Estate and Real Property tend to be
used interchangeably with Realty in everyday usage.
Contrast with personalty.
- receiver
- Court-appointed
custodian who holds property for the court, pending
final disposition of the matter before the court.
- recorded plat
- A subdivision map
filed with the county recorder's office that shows the
location and boundaries (lot and block number) of
individual parcels of land. Contrast with
government survey method
and metes and bounds.
- recording
- The act of entering
in the public records, the written record of title to
real property, thereby giving constructive notice to
the public.
- recovery fund
- A fund maintained by
the Texas Real Estate Commission which upon court
order is used to reimburse the public for monetary
loss due to illegal acts of licensees.
- redlining
- The illegal practice
of refusing to originate mortgage loans, or limiting
their number, in certain neighborhoods on the basis of
racial or ethnic composition. See
Fair Housing.
- refinancing
- To apply for a new
mortgage in order to gain better terms, usually either
a lower interest rate or a different principal amount.
- Regulation 'Z'
- Truth in lending law
developed by the Federal Reserve System which requires
lenders to provide full disclosure of the terms of the
loan, including interest rates expressed as an annual
percentage rate (APR).
- RELA
- Real Estate License
Act.
- release
- To relinquish an
interest or claim to a piece of property.
- remainder
- The future interest
in an estate which takes effect after the termination
of another estate, such as a life estate; what is left
at the termination of a life estate.
- rent control
- Laws that limit the
amount of rent landlords may charge, and that state
when and by how much the rent can be raised. Most rent
control laws also require a landlord to provide a good
reason, such as repeatedly late rent, for evicting a
tenant. Rent control exists in some cities and
counties in California, Maryland, New Jersey, New York
and Washington, D.C.
- reserves
- Amounts of money set
aside by a mortgage company to assure payment of
property taxes, homeowners' association dues, and
insurance premiums. The money is kept in an escrow
account
- reservation
- A right reserved by a
grantor in the sale or lease of a property. In a sale,
the title of all property passes to the grantee, but
the use may be reserved for the grantor. Contrast with
exception.
- RESPA
- Real Estate
Settlement Procedures Act is a federal law which deals
with the procedures to be followed in a real estate
closing, and is intended to make borrowers more
knowledgeable about possible costs and charges.
- restrictions
- Limitations on the
use or occupancy of real estate contained in a deed or
in local ordinances pertaining to land use.
- right of
survivorship
- The right of a
surviving joint tenant to take ownership of a deceased
joint tenant's share of the property. See
joint tenancy.
- riparian owner
- One who owns land
bounding upon a river or water course (stream, creek,
bayou, etc.).
- Road Utility
District (RUD)
- Pursuant to Article
III, Section 52 of the Texas Constitution, a Road
Utility District may be created to construct, acquire,
improve and provide financing for a road facility.
The term "road facility" is defined as a road
constructed, acquired or improved by a district; or
property, an easement, or work constructed, acquired,
or improved by a district and necessary or appropriate
for, or in aid of the improvement of, a river, creek,
or stream to prevent overflow; or the construction and
maintenance of a pool, lake, reservoir, dam, canal or
waterway for the purpose of drainage, if the property,
easement, or works is related to, or in furtherance
of, the construction, acquisition, or improvement of a
road.
- running with the
land
- A phrase used in
property law to describe a right or duty that remains
with a piece of property no matter who owns it. For
example, the duty to allow a public beach access path
across waterfront property would most likely pass from
one owner of the property to the next.
- Rural Fire
Prevention District (RFPD)
- A special taxing
district created to provide rural residents with
fire-fighting, fire prevention and other emergency
services.
- sales contract
- A written agreement
stating the terms of the sale agreed to by both buyer
and seller. TREC
promulgated standard contracts must be used by all
licensees, with certain limited exceptions. See
earnest money contract.
- Salesperson Annual
Education (SAE)
- A real estate
salesperson is required to complete a total of 18
semester (270 classroom) hours of education by the end
of their third year of licensure. All active and
inactive salespersons, who are under the SAE
requirement, must show evidence of having completed a
minimum of 30 hours in core or related real estate
education each year or until a total of 270 classroom
hours have been completed. At least 180 hours of the
270 must be in core real estate. Therefore the other
90 hours may be in related. Evidence of successful
completion must be received on or before the renewal
filing deadline. If this documentation is not received
on time, the license will expire.
- SAE
- Acronym -
Salesperson
Annual Education
- secondary mortgage
market
- Buying and selling of
existing mortgage loans, designed to provide
additional liquidity for lenders. Contrast with
primary mortgage market.
Also see Fannie Mae,
Freddie Mac
and Ginnie Mae.
- security deposit
- A payment required by
a landlord to ensure that a
tenant pays rent on time and
keeps the rental unit in good condition. If the tenant
damages the property or leaves owing rent, the
landlord can use the security deposit to cover what
the tenant owes.
- security interest
- An interest that a
lender takes in the borrower's property to assure
repayment of a debt.
- self amortized
loan
- A loan which will
retire the debt by systematic payments of principal
and interest, so that at the end of the loan period,
the balance will be zero.
- servicing a loan
- The ongoing process
of collecting your monthly mortgage payment, including
accounting for and payment of your yearly tax and/or
homeowners insurance bills.
- servient tenement
- Property that is
subject to use by another for a specific purpose. For
example, a beachfront house that has a public walkway
to the beach on its premises would be a servient
tenement.
- setback
- The distance a
building must be set back from the property lines in
accordance with local zoning ordinances or deed
restrictions.
- shared equity
mortgage
- A home loan in which
the lender gets a share of the equity of the home in
exchange for providing a portion of the
down payment. When
the home is later sold, the lender is entitled to a
portion of the proceeds.
- short sale (of
house)
- A sale of a house in
which the proceeds fall short of what the owner still
owes on the mortgage. Many lenders will agree to
accept the proceeds of a short sale and forgive the
rest of what is owed on the mortgage when the owner
cannot make the mortgage payments. By accepting a
short sale, the lender can avoid a lengthy and costly
foreclosure, and the owner is able to pay off the loan
for less than what he owes. See also
deed in lieu (or
foreclosure).
- simple interest
- Interest computed
only on the principal balance. Contrast with
compound interest.
- single-family home
- A free-standing,
residential structure, designed to accomodate one
family. Single-family homes include traditional
houses, as well as patio
homes.
- special warranty
deed
- A warranty deed
which, instead of warranting the title from
sovereignty of the soil to the last grantee, merely
warrants the title against every person whomsoever
lawfully claiming or to claim the same, or any part
thereof, by, through or under the grantor.
- specific lien
- A claim that only
applies to or affects a certain property or group of
properties. Contrast with
general lien.
- specific
performance
- Carrying out of the
precise terms agreed upon in a contract. Also see
suit for specific
performance.
- spite fence
- An unsightly fence
erected for no other purpose than to irritate a
neighbor. Such a fence may be illegal under local
fence height and appearance regulations or state laws
that specifically bar spite fences. Even if it doesn't
violate regulation or laws, the fence may still be
illegal if it was built with malicious intent.
- Statute of Frauds
- The law which
requires among other things, that all contracts
transferring real estate, or for the leasing of
property for over one year, must be in writing to be
enforceable.
- statutory year
- A year composed of
twelve months, each with thirty (30) days, for a total
of 360 days in a statutory year. Also known as
a banker's year. Contrast with
calendar year.
- steering
- The illegal practice
of directing members of minority groups to, or away
from, certain areas or neighborhoods;
channeling. See
Fair Housing.
- subject to
mortgage
- The buyer of an
already mortgaged property makes the payments, but
does not take personal responsibility for the loan.
Should the mortgage be foreclosed and the property
sold for a lesser amount than is owed, the
grantee-buyer is not personally liable for the
deficiency, but the grantor-seller is. Contrast with
assumption of mortgage.
- sublease
- A rental agreement or
lease between a tenant and a new tenant (called a
sublessee) who will either share the rental or take
over from the first tenant. The sublessee pays rent
directly to the tenant. The tenant is still
completely responsible to the landlord for the rent
and for any damage, including that caused by the
sublessee. Most landlords prohibit subleases unless
they have given prior written consent. Compare with
assignment.
- subpoena
- A legal process
ordering a witness to appear and give testimony or to
present documents under penalty of law.
TREC has subpoena powers.
- substitution,
principle of
- The principle which
states that a buyer will pay no more for a property
than the cost of an equally desirable alternative
property.
- succession
- The passing of
property or legal rights after death. The word
commonly refers to the distribution of property under
a state’s intestate succession laws, which determine
who inherits property when someone dies without a
valid will. When used in connection with real estate,
the word refers to the passing of property by will or
inheritance, as opposed to gift, grant, or purchase.
- suit for specific
performance
- A legal action
brought by either a buyer or a seller to enforce
performance of the terms of a contract.
- TALCB
- Acronym -
Texas Appraiser Licensing and Certification Board
- taking
- See
eminent domain.
- tenancy by the
entirety
- A special kind of
property ownership that's only for married couples.
Both spouses have the right to enjoy the entire
property, and when one spouse dies, the surviving
spouse gets title to the property (called a
right of survivorship).
It is similar to joint tenancy,
but it is available in only about half the states.
- tenancy in common
- A type of ownership
in which two or more people have an undivided interest
in property, without the right of survivorship. Upon
death of one of the owners, his/her interest passes to
his/her heirs or devises. Contrast with
joint tenancy.
- tenant
- Anyone, including a
corporation, who rents real property, with or without
a house or structure, from the owner (called the
landlord). The
tenant may also be called the "lessee."
- tenants in common
- See
tenancy in common.
- tenement
- Everything that may
be occupied under a lease by a tenant.
- term
- The actual life of a
mortgage, at the end of which the mortgage becomes due
and payable unless the lender renews the mortgage.
- time is of the
essence
- A clause, which if
included in a contract, makes failure to perform by a
specified date a material breach or violation of the
contract.
- timeshare
- An arrangement under
which a purchaser receives an interest in real
property and the right to use an accommodation or
amenities, or both, for a specified period and on a
recurring basis. Used primarily for selling vacation
properties.
- title
- The right of
ownership of a property.
- title company
- A company that
provides title insurance policies. In Texas title
companies also act as escrow agents, conduct title
searches and hold closings.
- title insurance
- Protection for
lenders or homeowners against financial loss resulting
from legal defects in the title.
- title search
- Checks all the
records relating to the property to determine whether
the seller can sell the property, and can do so free
of liens.
- title theory state
- The system in which
the lender has legal title to the mortgaged property
and the borrower has equitable title. Texas is not a
title theory state. Contrast with
lien theory state.
- torrens system
- A system of land
registration (not used in Texas) in which clear title
is established with a governmental authority, which
issues title certificates to owners.
- townhouse
- A dwelling unit
usually with two,three or four floors, and shared
structural walls. It can be individually owned, a
condominium, a
cooperative,
a planned
unit development or a rental property.
- transaction fee
- A fee which may be
charged each time you draw on a home equity credit
line.
- triple net lease
- See
net lease.
- trust deed
- The most common
method of financing real estate purchases in
California (most other states use mortgages). The
trust deed transfers the title to the property to a
trustee--often a title company--who holds it as
security for a loan. When the loan is paid off, the
title is transferred to the borrower. The trustee will
not become involved in the arrangement unless the
borrower defaults on the loan. At that point, the
trustee can sell the property and pay the lender from
the proceeds. In Texas it is more commonly refered to
as a deed of trust.
- trustee
- One who as agent for
others handles money or holds title to their land.
- underwriting
- The process of
verifying data and approving a loan.
- unlawful detainer
- An
eviction lawsuit.
- usufruct
- The right to use
property--or income from property--that is owned by
another.
- usury
- Charging more than
the rate of interest allowed by law.
- VA
- The Veterans
Administration, a federal agency which guarantees
loans made to qualified veterans on approved property.
- vara
- A measurement of
length of 33 1/3 inches in
Texas.
- variable rate
- An interest rate that
changes periodically in relation to an index. Payments
may increase or decrease accordingly.
- variance
- An exception to a
zoning ordinance,
usually granted by a local government. For example, if
you own an oddly shaped lot that could not accommodate
a home in accordance with your city's
setback requirement, you
could apply at the appropriate office for a variance
allowing you to build closer to a boundary line.
- vendee
- Purchaser.
- vendor
- Seller.
- view ordinance
- A law adopted by some
cities or towns with desirable vistas--such as those
in the mountains or overlooking the ocean--that
protects a property owner from having his or her view
obstructed by growing trees. View ordinances don't
cover buildings or other structures that may block
views.
- village acre
- A lot size used in
the Houston area to denote a 40,000 square foot
parcel. In the Memorial Villages of Bunker Hill,
Hedwig, Hillshire, Hunter's Creek, Piney Point and
Spring Valley, lot sizes are often expressed in
village acres or a fractions of village acres. The
term was coined by developers who successfully lobbied
for slighty smaller, minimum lot size requirements, in
the cities' zoning
regulations.
- virtual home tour
- Any method used to
provide internet users with a graphical presentation
of a home, or homes. Presentations may include web
pages, java applets, streaming video, panoramic images
and bubble views.
- void
- Having no legal force
or effect; legally invalid.
- voidable
- A contract which
appears valid and enforceable on the surface, but may
be declared invalid by one of the parties, such as a
contract entered into by a minor.
- waiver
- The intentional or
voluntary relinquishment of a known claim or right.
- walk through
- (1) A Buyer's
on-site inspection of the property being purchased,
just prior to closing.
- (2) A detailed
inspection of a new construction home, in which punch
list and cosmetic items are addressed, prior to final
acceptance.
- warranty deed
- A type of deed that
contains express assurances about the legal validity
of the title being transferred. See
general warranty deed
andspecial
warranty deed.
- writ of execution
- A court order which
authorizes and directs the proper officer of the court
(usually the sheriff) to carry into effect the
judgment or decree of the court.
- zero lot line
- A term generally used
to describe the positioning of a structure on a lot so
that one side rests directly on the lot's boundary
line (no set back). Where allowed by zoning and/or
deed restrictions, it is used for "patio
homes".
- zoning
- Exercise of police
power of city in regulating and controlling the
character or use of property. Zoning laws divide
cities into different areas according to use, from
single-family residences to industrial plants. Zoning
ordinances control the size, location, and use of
buildings within these different areas. Houston is
the largest city in the U.S. without zoning. Most of
the other cities and villages within the Houston
Metropolitan Area do have zoning regulations.
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Hewins Real Estate. All rights reserved. All of the information on this
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