Articles about Homebuying
THE MORTGAGE DICTIONARY
(Note: If you don't find a term you're looking for,
please contact me and I'll gladly explain it.)
ABSTRACT
The notes made by a title examiner based on his examination
of the land records. These notes are a concise summary
of the transactions affecting the property. The title
agency produces a BINDER from the information in the
abstract.
ACCELERATION CLAUSE
A condition in a real estate financing instrument
giving the lender the power to declare all sums owing
to the lender immediately due and payable upon the
happening of an event-- such as the sale of the property,
or a delinquency in the repayment of the note.
ACCRETION
The build up of land from natural forces such as wind
or water.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
As a verb, the confirmation by a party executing a
legal document that this is his signature and voluntary
act. This confirmation is made to an authorized officer
of the Court, attorney-at-law, or notary public who
signs a statement also called an acknowledgment.
ACRE
43,560 square feet of land.
ADJUSTMENT INTERVAL
On an adjustable rate mortgage, the time between changes
in the interest rate and/or monthly payment. Typically
the intervals are at one, three or five years, depending
on the index.
ADMINISTRATOR
A person appointed by the Court to settle the estate
of a person who dies without a will. The feminine
form is Administratrix. Compare, EXECUTOR.
ADVERSE POSSESSION
A claim made against land titled to another person
based on open, notorious, and hostile possession and
use of the land to the exclusion of the titled owner.
AGENCY
A relationship in which the agent is given the authority
to act on behalf of another person (Principal).
AGREEMENT
A meeting of minds.
A change to the correct or alter the original document/agreement
without changing its principal essence.
AMORTIZED LOAN
A loan to be repaid with interest and principal, by
a series of regular payments that are equal or nearly
equal, without any special payment prior to maturity.
AMORTIZATION
The periodic principal pay down of a loan.
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE (A.P.R.)
An interest rate reflecting the cost of a mortgage
at a yearly rate. This rate is likely to be higher
than the stated note rate or advertised rate on the
mortgage, because it takes into account points and
other credit costs. The APR allows home buyers to
compare different types of mortgages based on the
annual cost for each loan.
APPRAISAL
An estimate of the value of property, made by a qualified
professional called an "appraiser." Most
states require licenses. Various lenders have their
own lists of approved appraisers.
APPROVED ATTORNEY
An attorney authorized by a title insurance company
to handle closings and render title opinions.
APPURTENANCE
Anything attached to the land or used with it passing
to the new owner.
ASSESSMENT
A local tax levied against a property for a specific
purpose, such as sewer or street lights.
ASSIGN
To transfer interest.
ASSIGNEE
One who receives an assignment or transfer of rights.
An assignment of a contract transfers the right to
buy property.
ASSIGNOR
The one who assigns to another person.
ASSUMPTION
The agreement between buyer and seller where the buyer
takes over the payments on an existing mortgage from
the seller. Assuming a loan can usually save the buyer
money since this is an existing mortgage debt, unlike
a new mortgage where closing costs and new, possibly
higher, market-rate interest charges will apply.
ATTACHMENT
Seizure of property through Court process to repay
a debt.
ATTORNEY IN FACT
A type of agency relationship where one person holds
a POWER OF ATTORNEY allowing him to execute legal
documents on behalf of another. Decisions made by
the attorney in fact are binding on the principal.
BALLOON (payment) mortgage
Usually a short-term fixed-rate loan which involves
small payments for a certain period of time and one
large payment for the remaining amount of the principal
at a time specified in the contract.
BANKRUPTCY
A provision of Federal Law whereby a debtor surrenders
his assets to the Bankruptcy Court and is relieved
of the future obligation to repay his unsecured debts.
A Trustee in Bankruptcy administers the assets, selling
them to pay as much of the debt as possible. If your
seller is in bankruptcy, the Trustee in Bankruptcy
owns the property and is the party to sign the contract
and make decisions. After bankruptcy, the debtor is
discharged and his unsecured creditors may not pursue
further collection efforts against him. Secured creditors,
those holding deeds of trust or judgment liens, continue
to be secured by the property but they may not take
other action to collect from the debtor.
BENCHMARK
A permanent reference mark for surveyors.
BENEFICIARY
A person named to receive a benefit from a TRUST.
A contingent beneficiary has conditions attached to
his rights, usually someone else must die first.
BID
An offer.
BINDER
A title insurance binder is the written commitment
of a title insurance company to insure title to the
property subject to the conditions and exclusions
shown on the binder.
BLANKET MORTGAGE
A mortgage covering at least two pieces of real estate
as security for the same mortgage. This sort of loan
is more common for commercial property or "special
case" loans.
BOND
An amount of money, often posted with the Court, to
guarantee against loss as a result of a possible claim.
For example, if there is a LIEN against the property,
the owner may post a bond and the lien is removed
from the property and the parties argue over the money
rather than the property.
BREACH OF CONTRACT
Failure to perform provisions of a contract.
BROKER
An individual in the business of assisting in arranging
funding or negotiating contracts for a client buy
who does not loan the money himself. Brokers usually
charge a fee or receive a commission for their services.
BUILDING RESTRICTION LINE
A required set-back a certain distance from the road
within which no building may take place. This restriction
may appear in the original plat of subdivision, restrictive
covenants or by building codes and zoning ordinances.
BUY-DOWN
When the lender and/or the home builder subsidized
the mortgage by lowering the interest rate during
the first few years of the loan. While the payments
are initially low, they will increase when the subsidy
expires. These are sometimes used to qualify borrowers
for a loan amount that they would not otherwise qualify
for but will be able to pay in subsequent years as
their income increases.
BY-LAWS
Rules and regulations governing an association or
corporation.
CAPITAL GAINS
Profit earned from a sale of real estate.
CAPITALIZATION
A method used to estimate value of a property based
on the rate of return on investment.
CASHFLOW
The amount of cash derived over a certain period of
time from an income-producing property. The cash flow
should be large enough to pay the expenses of the
income-producing property (mortgage payment, maintenance,
utilities, etc.).
CAVEAT EMPTOR
Buyer beware. The buyer must inspect the property
and satisfy himself that it is adequate for his needs.
The seller is under no obligation to disclose defects
but may not actively conceal a known defect or lie
if asked.
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).
CERTIFICATE OF OCCUPANCY
A certificate issued by a local governmental body
stating that the building is in a condition to be
occupied.
CERTIFICATE OF SATISFACTION
A document signed by the Noteholder and recorded in
the land records evidencing release of a DEED OF TRUST,
MORTGAGE or other lien on the property.
CERTIFICATE OF TITLE
A written opinion by an attorney setting forth the
status of title to the property as shown on the public
records. The certificate does not certify as to matters
not of record and affords no protection unless the
author was negligent. Compare, TITLE INSURANCE.
CHAIN OF TITLE
The series of transactions from GRANTOR to GRANTEE
as evidenced in the land records.
CHATTEL
Personal property.
CLASS ACTION
A claim brought up on behalf of a group of people.
CLOSING
The meeting between the buyer, seller and lender or
their agents where the property and funds legally
change hands. Also called settlement. Closing costs
usually include an origination fee, discount points,
appraisal fee, title search and insurance, survey,
taxes, deed recording fee, credit report and notary
fees.
CLOUD ON TITLE
An evidence of encumbrances.
CONDEMNATION
A judicial proceeding through which a governmental
body takes a private property for a public use.
CC&R's
Covenants, conditions, and restrictions.
The basic rules establishing the rights and obligations
of owners of real property within a subdivision or
other tract of land in relation to other owners within
the same subdivision or tract and in relation to an
association of owners organized for the purpose of
operating and maintaining property commonly owned
by the individual owners.
COINSURANCE
When more than one insurance company shares the risk
of a particular transaction or series of transactions.
Lenders may require co-insurance on large commercial
projects.
COLLATERAL
Property pledged to secure a loan.
CONDEMNATION
Taking of private property for a public use through
exercise of the power of EMINENT DOMAIN. The Constitution
protects against taking without fair compensation.
CONDOMINIUM
A system of individual FEE SIMPLE ownership of portions
(units) in a multi-unit structure, combined with joint
ownership of common areas. Each individual may sell
or encumber his own unit. Compare, COOPERATIVE.
CONSERVATOR
Also called a Committee or Guardian, a person designated
by the Court to protect and preserve the property
of someone who is not able to manage their own affairs.
Examples include the mentally incompetent, minors
and incarcerated persons.
CONSTRUCTION LOAN
A short-term interim loan to pay for the construction
of buildings or homes. These are usually designed
to provide periodic disbursements to the builder as
he progresses. These are generally done by lenders
with offices local to the site of the construction.
This enables the lender or their agent to monitor
the progress of the construction.
CONTRACT
A legally enforceable agreement between two parties.
CONTRACT FOR DEED
Also known as a Land Contract or Land Installment
Contract. A method of financing where title remains
in the Seller's name until the Buyer has paid the
full purchase price. A Contract for Deed will normally
trigger the DUE ON SALE CLAUSE in a DEED OF TRUST
or MORTGAGE but Veterans Administration regulations
specifically allow Contracts for Deed without invoking
the DUE ON SALE CLAUSE.
CONVENTIONAL LOAN
A mortgage not insured by FHA or guaranteed by the
VA.
COOPERATIVE
A system of individual ownership of stock in a corporation
that. in turn, owns the structure. Each owner has
an exclusive right to use his individual unit and
must pay his portion of the debt encumbering the entire
building. Compare, CONDOMINIUM.
COST APPROACH
A method used by an appraiser to estimate replacement
costs of improvements less depreciation.
COTENANCY
Ownership in the same land by more than one person.
See, TENANTS IN COMMON, JOINT TENANTS, TENANTS BY
THE ENTIRETY.
COVENANT
A written agreement or restriction on the use of land
or promising certain acts. Homeowner Associations
often enforce restrictive covenants governing architectural
controls and maintenance responsibilities. However,
land could be subject to restrictive covenants even
if there is no homeowner's association.
CREDIT REPORT
A report documenting the credit history and current
status of a borrower's credit standing.
DEBT-TO-INCOME RATIO
The ratio, expressed as a percentage, which results
when a borrower's monthly payment obligation on long-term
debts is divided by his or her gross monthly income.
See housing expenses-to-income ratio.
DEED
The written document conveying real property. The
Deed must be executed (signed), ACKNOWLEDGED, and
DELIVERED to the Grantee. Once recorded at the Courthouse,
the original piece of paper is not needed to convey
title in the future.
DEED OF TRUST
A voluntary lien to secure a debt deeding the property
to Trustees who foreclose, sell the property at public
auction, in the event of default on the Note the Deed
of Trust secures. Compare, MORTGAGE.
DEFAULT
Failure to meet legal obligations in a contract, specifically,
failure to make the monthly payments on a mortgage.
DEFERRED INTEREST
When a mortgage is written with a monthly payment
that is less than required to satisfy the note rate,
the unpaid interest is deferred by adding it to the
loan balance. See negative amortization
DEFICIENCY JUDGMENT
If the foreclosure sale does not bring sufficient
proceeds to pay the costs of sale and the note in
full, the holder of the note may obtain a judgment
against the maker for the difference.
DELIVERY
The final, unconditional and absolute transfer of
a DEED to the Grantee so that the Grantor may not
revoke it. A Deed, signed but held by the Grantor,
does not pass title.
DOWER
A spouse's interest in the property of a deceased
spouse.
DOWN PAYMENT
Money paid to make up the difference between the purchase
price and the mortgage amount.
DUAL AGENCY
Representation of opposing parties (buyer and seller)
at the same time in the same transaction. This situation
most often refers to cases where the Realtor is the
agent for both parties.
DUE ON SALE CLAUSE
A clause in the MORTGAGE that makes the loan non-assumable
by providing the noteholder may call the loan immediately
due and payable upon a sale or conveyance of an interest
in the property. The FNMA/FHLMC form provides that
a lease of more than three years or a lease with an
option to buy also triggers this provision.
EARNEST MONEY
A good faith deposit.
EASEMENT
The right to use the land of another for a specific
limited purpose. Examples include utility lines, driveways,
and INGRESS AND EGRESS. Easements can be temporary
or permanent.
EMINENT DOMAIN
The power of the state to take private property for
public use upon payment of just compensation.
ENCROACHMENT
The physical intrusion of a structure or improvement
on the land of another. Examples include a fence or
driveway over the property line.
ENCUMBRANCE
Any lien, liability or charge against a property.
EQUAL CREDIT OPPORTUNITY ACT (ECOA)
Is a federal law that requires lenders and other creditors
to make credit equally available without discrimination
based on race, color, religion, national origin, age,
sex, marital status or receipt of income from public
assistance programs.
EQUITY
The difference between the fair market value and current
indebtedness, also referred to as the owner's interest.
The value an owner has in real estate over and above
the obligation against the property.
EQUITY SHARING
A form of joint ownership between an owner/occupant
and an owner/investor. The investor takes depreciation
deductions for his share of the ownership. The occupant
receives a portion of the tax write-offs for interest
and taxes and a part of his monthly payment is treated
as rent. The co-owners divide the profit upon sale
of the property. Compare, JOINT OWNERSHIP AGREEMENT.
ESCHEAT
Property that reverts to the state when an individual
dies without heirs and without a will.
ESCROW
A disinterested third party holds funds or documents
on behalf of others and subject to their instructions.
EXECUTOR
A person named in a will to carry out its terms and
administer the estate. The feminine form is Executrix.
Compare, ADMINISTRATOR.
FEE SIMPLE
The absolute total interest in real property. Compare,
LIFE ESTATE, REVERSION.
FEDERAL HOME LOAN MORTGAGE CORPORATION
A affiliate of the Federal Home Loan Bank which creates
a secondary money market in conventional residential
loans and in FHA and VA loans by purchasing mortgage
loans from members of the Federal Reserve System and
the Federal Home Loan Bank Systems.
FIDUCIARY RELATIONSHIP
A relationship of trust and confidence between principal
and agent; lawyer and client; doctor and patient;
etc.
FIXTURE
An item of personal property attached to real property
so that it can not be removed without damage to the
real property. A FIXTURE becomes part of the real
property.
FORECLOSURE
The process by which a lender sells property securing
a loan in order to repay the loan. Under a DEED OF
TRUST, foreclosure is by public auction after appropriate
advertisement. A MORTGAGE may require the lender to
obtain Court approval prior to sale.
FULLY INDEXED NOTE RATE
As related to adjustable rate mortgages, the index
value at the time of application plus the gross margin
stated in the note.
GENERAL WARRANTY DEED
The Grantor warrants title against all claims.
GRANTEE
The person receiving an interest in property. Compare,
GRANTOR
GRANTOR
The person granting, selling or giving up an interest
in property. Compare, GRANTEE.
GRADUATED PAYMENT MORTGAGE (GPM)
A type of flexible-payment mortgage where the payments
increase for a specified period of time and then level
off.
GROSS INCOME
Income before expenses.
GROSS MARGIN
With regard to an adjustable rate mortgage, an amount
expressed as percentage points, stated in the note
which is added to the current index value on the rate
adjustment date to establish a new note rate.
GROUND LEASE
The owner grants a long-term lease of the land (usually
99 years) and allows the lessee to build and use the
land as agreed. At the end of the term, the land and
all improvements revert to the owner.
GUARDIAN
One appointed by the Court to administer the affairs
of a minor. A guardian ad litem is appointed to protect
one's interest in a particular legal action. See,
CONSERVATOR.
GROSS INCOME
Income before expenses.
HAZARD INSURANCE
A form of insurance in which the insurance company
protects the insured from specified losses, such as
fire, windstorm and the like.
HIATUS
A gap or space left between two parcels of land and
not included in the legal description of either parcel.
Similar terms are Gaps and Gores.
HOMESTEAD DEED
A declaration filed in the land records that an individual
is asserting his homestead exemption. That exemption
allows one to protect some assets (amount varies by
state) against the claims of creditors.
HOUSING RATIO
The ratio, expressed as a percentage, which results
when a borrower's housing expenses are divided by
his/her gross monthly income. See debt-to-income ratio.
IMPOUND
That portion of a borrower's monthly payments held
by the lender or servicer to pay for taxes, hazard
insurance, mortgage insurance, lease payments, and
other items as they become due. Also known as reserves.
INCOME APPROACH
A method used by an appraiser to estimate the value
of a property by calculating its generated income.
INDEMNITY
A protection against actual loss or damage as a result
of the matter mentioned. An indemnity is not an absolute
guarantee that something won't happen; it states the
terms under which an actual loss will be compensated.
INDEX
A published interest rate against which lenders measure
the difference between the current interest rate on
an adjustable rate mortgage and that earned by other
investments (such as one-, three-, and five-year U.S.
Treasury security yields, the monthly average interest
rate on loans closed by savings and loan institutions,
and the monthly average costs-of-funds incurred by
savings and loans), which is then used to adjust the
interest rate on an adjustable mortgage up or down.
INGRESS AND EGRESS
Applied to EASEMENTS, meaning the right to go in and
out over a piece of property but not the right to
park on it.
INSURABLE TITLE
Title subject to a defect or claim which a title insurance
company is willing to insure against. Compare, MARKETABLE
TITLE.
INSURED CLOSING LETTER
An indemnity given to a lender from a title insurance
company, agreeing to be responsible if the closing
agent does not follow the lender's instructions or
misappropriates the loan proceeds. Lenders usually
require an insured closing letter be on file for each
settlement.
INTERIM FINANCING
A construction loan made during completion of a building
or a project. A permanent loan usually replaces this
loan after completion.
INITIAL NOTE RATE
With regard to an adjustable rate mortgage, the note
rate upon origination. This rate may differ from and
is usually less than the fully indexed rate.
INTESTATE
An estate without a Will. Compare, TESTATE
JOINT OWNERSHIP AGREEMENT
An agreement between owners defining their rights,
ownership, monetary obligations and responsibilities.
This could be between and investor and an occupant
or the occupants. If an investor is involved, the
investor does not take depreciation deductions and
none of the occupant's payment is deemed rent for
tax purposes. Compare, EQUITY SHARING.
JOINT TENANTS
Two or more persons own a property. Joint tenants
with the common law right of survivorship means the
survivor inherits the property without reference to
the decedent's will. Creditors may sue to have the
property divided to settle claims against one of the
owners. Compare, TENANTS IN COMMON, TENANTS BY THE
ENTIRETY.
JUDGMENT LIEN
A judgment is a lien against all real property owned
by the judgment debtor in the county where the judgment
is docketed (recorded).
JUMBO LOAN
A loan which is larger (more than $207,000 as of 1/1/96)
than the limits set by the Federal National Mortgage
Association and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation.
Because jumbo loans cannot be funded by these two
agencies, they usually carry a higher interest rate.
JUNIOR MORTGAGE
Mortgage of lesser priority than the prior recorded
mortgage.
LAND CONTRACT
See, CONTRACT FOR DEED.
LEASE HOLD ESTATE
Tenant's right of possession for a specific period
of time under a lease agreement. (Common in Hawaii.)
LIEN
A claim or charge against property. Property is said
to be encumbered by a lien and the lien must be removed
to clear title.
LIFE CAP
With regard to an adjustable rate mortgage, a ceiling
the note rate cannot exceed over the life of the loan.
LIFE ESTATE
The right to use, occupy and own for the life of an
individual. Compare, FEE SIMPLE.
LOAN-TO-VALUE RATIO (LTV)
The relationship between the amount of the mortgage
loan and the appraised value of the property expressed
as a percentage.
LIS PENDENS
Recorded document showing a pending litigation filed
in the court. These show up on the preliminary title
report and must be dealt with when transferring ownership
or refinancing.
LOAN APPLICATION
The loan application is the source of information
on which the lender bases a decision to make the loan;
defines the term of the loan, gives the name(s) of
the borrower(s), place of employment, salary, bank
accounts and credit references, and describes the
real estate that is to be mortgaged. It also stipulates
the amount of the loan being applied for and the repayment
terms.
MAJORITY
The age at which a person may handle his own affairs.
MARGIN
The amount a lender adds to the index on an adjustable
rate mortgage to establish the adjusted interest rate.
MARKETABLE TITLE
Title without defects or claims so as to be readily
accepted without fair or reasonable doubt. Compare,
INSURABLE TITLE.
MARKET VALUE
The highest price that a buyer would pay and the lowest
price a seller would accept on a property. Market
value may be different from the price a property could
actually be sold for at a given time.
MECHANIC'S LIENS
The right of an unpaid contractor, laborer or supplier
to file a lien against property to recover the value
of his work
METES AND BOUNDS
A means of describing land by directions and distances
rather than reference to a lot number. Generally used
when land has not been subdivided into lots.
MORTGAGE
A voluntary lien filed against property to secure
a debt, usually a loan. To foreclose, the lender must
often institute a court action and the borrower may
have the right to reclaim the property after foreclosure.
Compare, DEED OF TRUST.
MORTGAGE INSURANCE
Money paid to insure the mortgage when the down payment
is less than 20 percent. See private mortgage insurance,
FHA mortgage insurance.
Mortgagee
The lender
MORTGAGOR
The borrower or home owner.
NEGATIVE AMORTIZATION
Occurs when your monthly payments are not large enough
to pay all the interest due on the loan. This unpaid
interest is added to the unpaid balance of the loan.
The danger of negative amortization is that the home
buyer ends up owing more than the original amount
of the loan.
NET EFFECTIVE INCOME
The borrower's gross income minus federal income tax.
NET WORTH
The difference between total assets and total liabilities.
NON-ASSUMPTION CLAUSE
A statement in a mortgage contract forbidding the
assumption of the mortgage without the prior approval
of the lender. Note: The signed obligation to pay
a debt, as a mortgage note.
NOTE IN DEFAULT
A loan in default. A loan of which no payments are
being made and in danger of resulting in foreclosure.
NOTE
A written promise to pay a certain sum of money at
a certain time. A negotiable note starts "Pay
to the order of" and is transferable by endorsement
similar to a check.
NOTARY PUBLIC
One authorized by law to acknowledge and certify documents
and signatures.
OFFER
A proposal; after acceptance it becomes a contract.
OPTION
A right given for a consideration to keep an offer
to purchase or lease open for specific time.
PARTITION
The forced division of land among parties who were
formerly co-owners. A partition suit may ask to divide
the land, or if that is not practical, sell the land
and divide the proceeds.
PAY-OFF AMOUNT
A total balance; amount of a full payment on existing
loan or lien.
PLAT
A map showing the division of a piece of land with
lots, streets and, if applicable, common area.
PIPESTEM LOT
A lot connected to a public street by a narrow strip
of land. Usually several adjacent pipestems are combined
to form one driveway with each owner having a mutual-reciprocal
easement to use and maintain the driveway to the street.
PITI
Principal, Interest, Taxes and Insurance. Also called
monthly housing expense.
POINTS (loan discount points)
Prepaid interest assessed at closing by the lender.
Each point is equal to 1 percent of the loan amount
(e.g., two points on a $100,000 mortgage would cost
$2,000).
POWER OF ATTORNEY
A written document authorizing another to act on his
behalf as an ATTORNEY IN FACT. One does not need to
be a licensed attorney to act as an attorney in fact,
but power of attorney forms are powerful legal documents
that should be used only under advice of a licensed
attorney at law.
PREPAYMENT PENALTY
An additional charge imposed by the lender for paying
off a loan before the due date.
PRIME RATE
The most favorable interest rate charged by lenders
on short-term loans to qualified customers.
PRIVATE MORTGAGE INSURANCE (PMI)
In the event that you do not have a 20 percent down
payment, lenders will allow a smaller down payment—
as low as 3 percent in some cases. With the smaller
down payment loans, however, borrowers are usually
required to carry private mortgage insurance. Private
mortgage insurance will usually require an initial
premium payment and may require an additional monthly
fee depending on your loan's structure.
PROBATE
Court process to prove a valid will.
PROMISSORY NOTE
A written unsecured note promising to pay a specified
amount of money on demand, transferable to a third
party.
PUBLIC SALE
Sale, auction open to the public.
PURCHASE MONEY MORTGAGE (PMM)
Seller financing as a part of the purchase price.
QUIET TITLE
A suit brought to remove a claim or objection on title.
QUITCLAIM DEED
A deed releasing whatever interest you may hold in
a property but making no warranty whatsoever. Compare,
SPECIAL WARRANTY DEED and GENERAL WARRANTY DEED
REALTOR
A member of the National Association of Realtors.
REISSUE RATE
A discounted rate for title insurance when the title
was previously insured with an owner's title insurance
policy issued within the last ten years.
RECISION
The cancellation of a contract. With respect to mortgage
refinancing, the law that gives the home owner three
days to cancel a contract in some cases once it is
signed if the transaction uses equity in the home
as security.
RECORDING FEES
Money paid to the lender for recording a home sale
with the local authorities, thereby making it part
of the public records.
REFINANCE
Obtaining a new mortgage loan on a property already
owned, often to replace existing loans on the property.
REMAINDER
An interest in land that is postponed until the termination
of some other interest such as a LIFE ESTATE. Compare,
FEE SIMPLE.
RESPA
Short for the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act.
RESPA is a federal law that allows consumers to review
information on known or estimated settlement costs
once after application and once prior to or at a settlement.
The law requires lenders to furnish the information
after application only.
REVERSION
A provision in a conveyance that the land will return
to the grantor upon the happening of an event or contingency.
Compare, FEE SIMPLE.
RIPARIAN RIGHTS
The rights of an owner of land adjacent to water.
SBA
Small Business Administration.
SECONDARY MARKET
A market for the purpose of purchase and sale of existing
mortgages usually at discounted prices to provide
greater liquidity to the mortgagee/lender.
SECOND MORTGAGE
A mortgage recorded after a First mortgage, ranks
second in priority.
SPECIAL ASSESSMENT
Additional tax imposed by the local government for
public improvements such as new streets, etc.
SPECIAL WARRANTY DEED
The seller warrants he has done nothing to impair
title but makes no warranty before his ownership.
Compare, GENERAL WARRANTY DEED and QUITCLAIM DEED.
SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE
A legal action to complete the performance of a contract.
STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS
The time period to file a law suit to enforce a claim
or it is barred by law.
SUBDIVISION
Dividing land into lots and streets. The owner signs
a PLAT and Deed of Resubdivision which is recorded
among the land records. The state and county have
strict requirements for subdivision of land.
SUBJECT TO
Taking title to property with a lien but not agreeing
to be personally responsible for the lien, if the
holder who forecloses the lien can take the property
but may not collect any money from the owner who took
"subject to." Compare, ASSUMPTION.
TENANTS BY THE ENTIRETY
A husband and wife own the property with the common
law right of survivorship so, if one dies, the other
automatically inherits. One may not sue the other
to PARTITION the property. A creditor of one may not
claim the property or the proceeds of sale. Compare,
TENANT IN COMMON, JOINT TENANTS.
TENANTS IN COMMON
Two or more persons own the property with no right
of survivorship. If one dies, his interest passes
to his heirs, not necessarily the co-owner. Either
party, or a creditor of one, may sue to PARTITION
the property. Compare, TENANTS BY THE ENTIRETY, JOINT
TENANTS.
TESTATE
To die with a Will. Compare, INTESTATE.
TESTATOR
One who makes out a last will and testament. The feminine
form is Testatrix.
TITLE
A document that gives evidence of an individual's
ownership of property.
TITLE INSURANCE
Insurance that provides an INDEMNITY against loss
or damage as a result of defect in title ownership
to a particular piece of property. Title insurance
covers mistakes made during a TITLE SEARCH as well
as matters which could not be found or discovered
in the public records such as missing heirs, mistakes,
fraud and forgery. Compare, CERTIFICATE OF TITLE.
TITLE SEARCH
An examination of the public records, including court
decisions, to disclose facts concerning the ownership
of real estate. The title examiner prepares an ABSTRACT
and the title agent prepares a BINDER but decisions
regarding the legal sufficiency of title or questions
requiring legal interpretation must be resolved by
a licensed attorney at law.
TRUST
A right to or in property held for the benefit of
another. A trust may be written or implied. An implied
trust is called a Constructive Trust.
TRUSTEE
One who holds property in Trust for another.
TRUTH-IN-LENDING
A federal law requiring disclosure of the Annual Percentage
Rate to home buyers shortly after they apply for the
loan. Also known as Regulation Z.
TWO-STEP MORTGAGE
A mortgage in which the borrower receives a below-market
interest rate for a specified number of years (most
often five or seven), and then receives a new interest
rate adjusted (within certain limits) to market conditions
at that time. the lender sometimes has the option
to call the loan due with 30 days' notice at the end
of five or seven years.
UNDERWRITING
The decision whether to make a loan to a potential
home buyer based on credit, employment, assets, and
other factors and the matching of this risk to an
appropriate rate and term or loan amount.
USURY
Charging more than the maximum legally permitted rate
of interest.
VA LOAN
A long-term, low- or no-down-payment loan guaranteed
by the Department of Veterans Affairs. Restricted
to individuals qualified by military service or other
entitlements.
VARIABLE RATE MORTGAGE (VRM)
See adjustable rate mortgage
VERIFICATION OF DEPOSIT (VOD)
A document signed by the borrower's financial institution
verifying the status and balance of his/her financial
accounts.
VERIFICATION OF EMPLOYMENT (VOE)
A document signed by the borrower's employer verifying
his/her position and salary.
WAIVER
Relinquishment of a right.
WARRANTY DEED
A deed conveying the title to a property with a warranty
of clean, clear marketable title.
WRAPAROUND
The debt secured includes an existing debt already
on the property. The payments made to the holder of
the wraparound include payments due on the existing
loan and the holder must forward the appropriate portion
of each payment to the existing noteholder. Often
used to avoid a PREPAYMENT PENALTY or a DUE ON SALE
CLAUSE. Can refer to a wraparound DEED OF TRUST or
CONTRACT FOR DEED.
ZONING
Regulation of private land use and development by
local government. |