CALIFORNIA
BUNGALOW:
Compact, early twentieth-century single-story house.
CALIFORNIA RANCH:
One-story house, in a post-Second-World-War style, known for
its ground hugging design and low, pitched roof.
CALL
OPTION (PROVISIONS, RIGHTS):
A lender's right to demand payment of the outstanding
balance of the loan at a time specified in the loan
agreement.
CANCELLATION CLAUSE:
Provision in a contract that gives one or more parties the
right to terminate the contract if a specific event occurs.
CAP:
A limit. In
variable rate mortgages,
a limit as to how high periodic payments may go or how much
the interest may change within a given time period or over
the life of the mortgage.
CAP
RATE:
Short form for capitalization rate.
CAPACITY
OF PARTIES:
Legal competence to sign and be bound by a contract. One
might lack capacity as a result of being a minor, being
mentally challenged or not being of right mind. A contract
signed by an incapable person is not binding.
CAPE COD
COLONIAL:
A one-story house, compact in design and in an
early-American-style. Symmetrical layout with a central
entrance. Steep, gable-type roof, usually shingled, with a
low central chimney.
CAPITAL
ASSET:
A property to which certain tax rules (capital gains and
capital losses) apply.
CAPITAL EXPENDITURE:
Money spent to improve a property and enhance its value over
an extended period of time (as opposed to a repair). May be
added to the
adjusted cost base
of the property improved or depreciated over the useful life
of the improvement.
CAPITAL
GAIN:
increase in value of a capital property (a property other
than a principal residence) upon which tax is payable,
either upon disposition of the property or the deemed
disposition of the property under tax rules.
CAPITAL
IMPROVEMENT:
Value enhancing work carried out on a capital property.
CAPITAL
LOSS:
Decrease in value of a capital property (a property other
than a principal residence). May be set off against capital
gains or against regular income according to the tax rules.
CAPITAL:
The working money in a business venture.
CAPTURE
RATE:
A comparison of the sales or leasing rate of a particular
real estate development to the sales or leasing rate of all
developments in the same market.
CARRYING
CHARGES (COSTS):
The expense required to maintain a property over a given
period of time, including property taxes, maintenance,
insurance payments, interest charges on financing, etc.
CASH
EQUIVALENT:
The amount a vendor would have realized on the sale of a
property had she not accepted unfavourable (or favourable)
financing of the purchaser but received cash instead.
CASH FLOW:
Description of the net income from a property after all
expenses of holding and carrying the property are paid.
CASH METHOD:
An accounting method, based on actual cash moving in and out
of the company over a given period. See
accrual method.
CASH
RESERVE:
An amount of money that the purchaser of a property still
has after the transaction closes. Some lenders require a
certain level of cash reserve (equal to two payments) before
granting a mortgage.
CASH THROW-OFF:
See cash
flow.
CASH-OUT
REFINANCE:
When an owner renegotiates or negotiates a new mortgage and
the proceeds of the new financing exceed the money required
to pay out the old mortgage and any other costs, liens or
expenses, leaving money for the borrower.
CAVEAT
EMPTOR:
Latin, meaning "Let the Buyer beware". Maxim which applies
to real estate transactions where the onus is on the
Purchaser to satisfy him/her self as to the suitability and
condition of the property they are considering for purchase.
Vendor is not responsible to the Purchaser for the condition
of the property and, unless he is specifically asked, does
not generally have an obligation to reveal problems to the
Purchaser (except where the defect is hidden, serious and
could not be discovered by the Purchaser after reasonably
prudent inquiries and investigations).
CC&R'S:
Short form for "covenants, conditions, and restrictions",
which are the rules of general application governing the
relations between land owners in a specific subdivision,
development, condominium development or cooperative housing
facility. May be registered on title.
CEILING:
The limit over which the interest rate on a
variable rate mortgage may
not rise over the life of the loan.
CENTRAL
BUSINESS DISTRICT (CBD):
The business and commercial "core" of a municipality (also
known as "Downtown").
CERTIFICATE OF ELIGIBILITY:
Document issued by the Department of Veteran's Affairs to
qualifying veterans which entitles them to apply for
subsidized or guaranteed loans.
CERTIFICATE OF INSURANCE:
A document, issued by the insurance company, setting out the
particulars of the insurance coverage for a particular
property.
CERTIFICATE OF NO DEFENSE: Document which sets out a
certain set of facts which the issuer is agreeing to be
bound by. Same as
estoppel certificate.
CERTIFICATE OF OCCUPANCY:
Document issued by the local municipality indicating that a
new dwelling is suitable for occupation. Generally confirms
that the dwelling complies with local building, safety and
health by-laws.
CERTIFICATE OF REASONABLE VALUE (CRV):
Document issued by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA).
Based on an appraisal, sets out market value of a particular
property for the purposes of establishing maximum principal
amount available for a VA mortgage on the property.
CERTIFICATE OF SATISFACTION:
Document registered on title which provides evidence from
the lender that a loan instrument (deed of trust, mortgage,
other lien) has been paid out and released.
CERTIFICATE OF TITLE:
A written opinion of the quality of a person's ownership of
property, issued by a lawyer or a title insurance company
after a search of the title records has been conducted. May
contain qualifications to the certification regarding
defects found or potential defects not investigated.
CERTIFICATE OF VETERAN STATUS:
Document issued by Department of Veteran's Affairs
confirming that the person named in the Certificate has
served at least 90 days of continuous active duty (including
training time) and is eligible for certain VA benefits (such
as a VA mortgage).
CERTIFIED COPY:
A copy of a document which bears some form of declaration
(usually by the holder of the original document) that it is
a true copy of the original.
CERTIFIED GENERAL APPRAISER:
A person who has met the requirements to be licensed to
appraise the value of property. Qualification requirements
may vary from one jurisdiction to the next.
CERTIFIED HOME INSPECTOR:
A person who has met the requirements to be "certified" to
inspect the physical condition of homes. Qualification
requirements may vary from one jurisdiction to the next.
CERTIFIED PROPERTY MANAGER (CPM):
A person who has met the requirements of the Institute of
Real-Estate Management.
CERTIFIED RESIDENTIAL APPRAISER:
A person who has met the requirements to be licensed to
appraise the value of residential properties of no more than
four units.
CERTIFIED RESIDENTIAL BROKER (CRB):
A person who has met the requirements of the Realtors
National Marketing Institute.
CERTIFIED RESIDENTIAL SPECIALIST (CRS):
A person who has met the requirements of the Realtors
National Marketing Institute.
CESTUI
QUE TRUST:
The beneficiary of a trust, the person who is the
beneficial/equitable owner of the property held in trust for
which the trustee holds legal title.
CHAIN OF
TITLE:
A part of a title search. A listing, in chronological order,
of successive legal owners of a property, often listing as
well the registration particulars of the document by which
title is transferred from each owner to his successor in
title.
CHAIN:
An old unit of measurement of land, measuring 66 feet in
length. A chain equals 100 links, each 0.66 feet in length.
CHANGE
FREQUENCY:
Term describing the period of time between changes in the
interest rate and/or payments of a variable rate (adjustable
rate) mortgage or loan (i.e. one week, one month etc.).
CHATTEL:
An item of personal property which is not affixed to the
land or building (as opposed to a fixture, an item which is
a part of the land or building). Chattels are generally not
included in the sale of property unless specifically
included in the Agreement of Purchase and Sale.
CHATTEL
MORTGAGE:
A debt secured against items of personal property rather
than against land, buildings and fixtures.
CLEAR
TITLE:
Ownership of land which is marketable and free of competing
claims, liens, mortgages or other encumbrances.
CLAIM:
A right asserted against another party. One might register a
claim on title to the property to which the claim applies,
file a claim under an insurance policy or file a Statement
of Claim in court to assert one's rights.
CLASS
ACTION:
A legal proceeding which presents the related or similar
claims of an identifiable group against a single or group of
defendants, usually by using one representative claimant to
assert the claims on behalf of the group.
CLIENT:
Customer. The person who hires a professional (broker,
banker, lawyer, investment counsellor, etc.)
CLOSED
MORTGAGE:
A land loan that cannot be prepaid or re-negotiated before
the end of its term without the payment of an interest
penalty.
CLOSED-END MORTGAGE:
A mortgage with a set principal amount which cannot be
increased or extended during the life of the mortgage.
CLOSING:
The culmination of any transaction in which the interested
parties (or their representatives) meet to exchange
documents, funds, and property and, if necessary, to
register the transfer of title.
CLOSING COSTS:
Moneys expended by a party in completing a transaction, over
and above the purchase price, including: legal fees, taxes,
mortgage application charges, interest adjustments,
registration fees, appraisal fees, etc.
CLOSING DATE:
Also known a Completion Date. The date set in the Agreement
of Purchase and Sale upon which the transaction is to be
completed, the purchase price paid and the transfer of title
registered.
CLOSING STATEMENT:
Also known as
HUD-1 statement.
A document which sets out the financial agreement between
the parties, the costs each must pay, and all other similar
information regarding a transaction (may be joint or
separate for each party).
CLOUD
(ON TITLE):
Any unresolved claim against ownership of all or part of a
property, affecting the owner's title to the property and
marketability of that title.
CLUSTER
HOUSING:
Development design which places attached dwelling in close
proximity to each other, with nearby open spaces set out for
common use of the dwelling owners.
CODE OF
ETHICS:
A set of rules governing the behavior of members of the
organization that has established the Code. Lawyers and real
estate brokers/agents both have their own Codes.
COINSURANCE:
A technique used to share the risk of a larger development
between several insurance companies, each company covering a
certain percentage of the total value of the insured
property. Each policy may include a clause setting a minimum
percentage of the total value of the insured property which
the owner must keep insured in order to be eligible for
payment under the policy.
COLD
CANVASS:
Also known as "Cold Call". Contacting home owners out of the
blue to solicit business or, in the case of a real estate
broker or agent, listings.
COLLATERAL:
Property (real or personal) which is pledged to secure a
loan or mortgage. If the debt is not paid, the lender has
the right to sell the collateral to recoup the outstanding
principal and interest on the loan.
COLLATERAL MORTGAGE:
A loan which is secured by some sort of written note of
indebtedness (such as a Promissory Note) which is
secondarily secured by a mortgage registered against a
property.
COLLECTION:
The act of pursuing a debtor who is delinquent on his loan
payments.
CO-MAKER:
Also known a "Guarantor". Someone who signs a loan document
along with the principal borrower, pledging to be
responsible for the loan should the borrower fail to pay it.
COMMERCIAL BROKER:
A real estate professional who deals in properties with
commercial (business, retail, etc.) uses.
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY:
As opposed to residential or industrial property. Property
zoned, designed or intended for use retail, office, or
similar users.
COMMINGLE:
To allow to mix, as in money belonging to two or more people
deposited to the same account and used by each person
regardless of the amount they have deposited.
COMMISSION:
Payment to a salesperson (a listing real estate agent or
broker) for her efforts in marketing and selling a property,
usually expressed as a percentage of the purchase price.
COMMISSION SPLIT:
The division of the payment made to the listing agent
between that agent and her broker, or between the listing
agent and agent representing the Purchaser (the selling
agent).
COMMITMENT:
A promise, usually in writing, to provide a mortgage or
other loan. May also be used in insurance field. Sets out
details of mortgage, insurance. Often referred to as
Commitment Letter or Binder.
COMMITMENT FEE:
The fee charged by the lender to commit itself to a mortgage
or loan on specific terms.
COMMON
AREA ASSESSMENTS:
Also known as Common Element Fees. A periodic charge levied
against all of the owners of units in a condominium or
planned unit development (PUD) project which is used by the
condominium corporation or homeowner's association to pay
for repair, maintenance and other expenses of the common
areas in the development.
COMMON
AREAS:
Portions of the property and buildings owned by a
condominium corporation or planned unit development (PUD)
homeowners' association, or a cooperative development's
association that are available for the use of all unit
owners. Also used in rental properties to refer to those
facilities for the use of all tenants.
COMMON
ELEMENTS:
A common area in a condominium project which is owned by the
condominium corporation and for the use of all unit owners.
COMMON
LAW:
As opposed to statute law. Laws or legal principles that
have been established by courts over the years. May be
codified into a statute or overruled by a statute passed by
the government.
COMMUNITY ASSOCIATION:
Any organization established and run by property owners in a
particular area, often to represent the common interests of
the owners in dealings with government, planning bodies,
developers or other outside parties.
COMMUNITY HOME BUYER'S PROGRAM:
Program established to find creative ways to finance home
purchases for people with modest income.
COMMUNITY PROPERTY:
The principle that property accumulated by the joint efforts
of a married couple should be considered to be owned by both
of them in equal shares, no matter who has legal title to
the property.
COMPARABLES:
Used in assessing or establishing the fair market value of a
property, a property which has been sold recently that is
similar in size, condition, location and amenities to the
subject property.
COMPETENT PARTIES:
People who are legally capable of entering and being bound
by a contract (i.e. of age, mentally capable).
COMPLETION DATE:
See
Closing Date.
COMPONENT DEPRECIATION:
For tax purposes, allocating a portion of the total cost of
renovation to each component of the renovation (roof,
plumbing, electrical, foundation, etc.) and then
depreciating the cost of each component separately.
COMPOUND
INTEREST:
As opposed to simple interest. The accumulation of interest
on a loan over time where interest is charged not only on
the principal of the loan but also on all interest accrued
against the principal to the end of the last compound
period.
CONCESSIONS:
Sacrifices made by a party to convince another party to
enter a contract.
CONDEMNATION:
1. The taking of private land for public use by a municipal
or other government body through a court action under the
principal of Eminent Domain. See also Expropriation.
2. An order made by a health or building department barring
the use of a dangerous or hazardous property.
CONDITION(S):
Clauses in the Agreement which must be fulfilled before the
Agreement becomes firm and binding. If the condition is not
fulfilled, the Agreement will usually become null and void
and any deposit paid returned to the Purchaser.
CONDITIONAL OFFER:
An offer to purchase a property which is contingent on the
fulfillment of certain conditions before it becomes firm and
binding. Also known as "Conditional Sales Contract".
CONDOMINIUM:
A development where individuals own dwelling units but share
common areas with the other unit owners of the complex. The
maintenance of the common areas etc. is taken care of by the
Condominium Corporation in which every unit owner owns a
share and has voting rights. The Condominium Corporation is
created by the registration of a Declaration and by-laws on
title to the property and all individual units.
CONDOMINIUM OWNERS ASSOCIATION:
An organization made up of unit owners in a condominium
development established to govern relations between the
owners and to administer the rules, by-laws and covenants of
the condominium
CONFORMING:
Complying with the requirements of a certain statute, by-law
or organization.
CONSERVATOR:
Also called a Committee, Personal Representative or
Guardian, a person appointed by the Court to administer the
property of a person who is not capable of managing his own
affairs.
CONSIDERATION:
The value, asset, service, information etc. which is offered
to another party in a contract in exchange for that party's
agreeing to enter the contract. A contract is not binding if
each party does not offer at least some consideration to the
other party(ies).
CONSTANT
PAYMENT LOAN:
A type of loan which requires equal, periodic payments over
a certain term, at the end of which the amount owing under
the loan will be completely paid out.
CONSTRUCTION LOAN:
A structured, short-term loan to a builder or developer to
allow for the development of land. Funds are advanced at
certain stages of the development project to pay for
specific expenses, fees or costs.
CONSTRUCTIVE EVICTION:
Actions of a landlord (or third party) which interfere with
a tenant's use and enjoyment of the rented premises to such
an extent that the tenant is, at law, considered to have
been improperly forced out of the premises.
CONSTRUCTIVE NOTICE:
The legal principle that deems that a person has knowledge
of a certain fact once that fact is made a part of a public
record. The registration of a lien on title to a property
represents constructive notice to all persons interested in
that property of that lien, whether they have investigate
the title records or not.
CONSUMER
REPORTING AGENCY (OR BUREAU):
Also known as Credit Bureau. The source to which the banks
or other lenders turn for information on the credit history
of an applicant.
CONTIGUOUS:
See also
Abutting.
Sharing a common boundary, touching.
CONTINGENCY:
An event which may (or may not) happen in the future, a
condition that must be fulfilled before a contract becomes
firm and binding.
CONTRACT:
A legally binding agreement (oral or written) between two or
more persons regarding an exchange of some sort. A legally
binding contract must include consideration passing between
the parties, an intention on the part of all parties to be
bound to the contract, a meeting of the minds of the parties
as to the contents of the contract, and an element of
clarity such that the terms of the contract may be
interpreted, understood and enforced by a court.
CONTRACT FOR DEED:
Also known as a Land Contract or Land Installment
Contract. Transfer of a property where the title remains in
the Vendor's name until the Purchaser makes the final
payment to the Vendor of the Purchase Price.
CONTRACT
OF SALE:
Also known as Agreement of Purchase and Sale, Offer to
Purchase, Contract of Purchase. The written agreement
between the Vendor and Purchaser for the sale of property
which contains all of the terms, conditions and financial
details of the transaction.
CONTRACT
RENT:
The periodic rental payment as set out in the lease
contract.
CONTRACTOR:
A tradesman who works in the construction industry under a
contract with the owner of the property. See also "sub-contractor".
CONVENTIONAL LOAN:
1. A loan or mortgage to which the normal rules of such
transactions apply without the inclusion of a government
program (i.e. VA or FHA insurance).
2. A loan or mortgage with a fixed interest rate, fixed
payments and a fixed term.
CONVERSION CLAUSE:
A provision in a
variable rate mortgage
(adjustable
rate mortgage) which allows
the borrow to change the mortgage to a fixed rate mortgage
upon the occurrence of certain events.
CONVERSION:
1. a change in the use of a property, or in the way a
property is owned (i.e. from private to condominium
ownership)
2. the improper taking of the property of another for one's
own use;
3. In Ontario, the transfer of a property from the Registry
System of land registration to the new Land Titles
Conversion Qualified (LTCQ) computerized system by the
agents of the Ontario government.
CONVERTIBILITY CLAUSE:
See "Conversion
Clause".
CONVEY:
To transfer title to (or any other interest in) a property
to someone else.
CONVEYANCE:
The act of transferring an interest in property to someone
else or the document which effects the transfer.
CO-OP:
Short for Cooperative, a mode of land ownership where the
occupiers of individual units in a building own an interest
in the Cooperative Corporation that owns the whole property.
COOPERATING BROKER:
A Broker who is involved in a real estate transaction and
is, therefore, entitled to share in the commission from the
transaction.
COOPERATIVE (CO-OP):
See "Co-op".
CORPORATE RELOCATION:
The movement of an employee of a corporation to a new city
(or other location) as part of the normal business of the
corporation. The employee's moving expenses (including the
costs of selling and buying a home) may be paid by the
corporation and are tax deductible.
CORPORATION:
A legal entity created by the registration of appropriate
incorporating documents with the supervising government
office. May be private (ownership held by specific
individuals and not traded on a public stock exchange) or
public (shares traded on stock exchange). Shareholders are
protected from liability for the actions of the corporation.
Corporations may enter contracts and own property.
CORPOREAL:
Tangible.
COST
APPROACH:
An appraisal method where a property's value is estimated
using the cost of the property plus cost of all
improvements, minus depreciation.
COST
ESTIMATING:
Predicting the total cost of a construction project by
estimating, in advance, the actual costs of all elements in
the project, including legal fees, labor, permits, materials
etc.
COST
PLUS CONTRACT:
An agreement with a contractor or builder which sets the
contractor's compensation for the project as a percentage of
the total cost of all labor and materials.
CO-TENANCY:
When more than one person owns a piece of property. Title
will be held by the owners as Joint Tenants (each owns the
land equally and, in the event of the death of one of the
owners, the survivors continue to share title equally by
right of survivorship) or as Tenants in Common (each owner
has title to a specific percentage of the land and may sell,
mortgage, or bequeath her interest to a third party without
consent of the other owners).
COUNTEROFFER:
An answer to an offer. If a prospective Purchaser presents
an offer to purchase a property to the owner of the
property, that owner may accept the offer as it stands,
reject it outright or respond with a "counteroffer" which
changes certain terms of the original offer. Making a
counteroffer, at law, entails rejection of the original
offer. The Purchaser may then counteroffer back, making
changes to the owner's counteroffer. Sometimes, the process
of counteroffering is referred to as "signing back" the
offer.
COUNTY:
A territorial division of land in a geographic region (state
or province). Similar to Regions and Regional Municipality.
COVENANT:
A promise contained in a contract or agreement.
COVENANT
RUNNING WITH THE LAND:
A covenant that is literally attached to the land and binds
present and future owners to the requirements of the
covenant. In new developments, such covenants may be
restrictive: the owner is not allowed to alter grading
patterns of the land, or erect new fences, or put up TV
aerials, or to change the color of the exterior of the
house. Such restrictive covenants may be enforced by a
Homeowners' Association.
CREATIVE
FINANCING:
An arrangement for the financing of the purchase of a
property which is outside the normal practice of residential
financing.
CREDIT:
1. The ability to access money, to use money prior to
earning it.
2. The accounting term for a liability or for equity,
entered on the right side of the ledger.
3. As a verb, to allot for the benefit of a person (i.e. You
must credit the Purchaser on closing for the deposit paid).
CREDIT
HISTORY:
A statement of the debts and obligations, whether current or
past, of a person which helps a lender to assess the risk of
a loan to that person.
CREDIT
LIFE INSURANCE:
A form of insurance which is designed specifically to pay
out the debts of the insured person in case of their death.
CREDIT
LIMIT:
The maximum amount available to a person under a loan,
credit card or other borrowing arrangement.
CREDIT
RATING:
Based on an analysis of a person's credit history, an
evaluation of that person's ability to manage a new debt or
debts overall.
CREDIT
RISK:
The potential for a borrower to fail to live up to her
obligations under a loan arrangement.
CREDITOR:
Any person to whom money is owed. May be secured (the debt
has been registered against the property of the debtor) or
unsecured.
CUL-DE-SAC:
French term for a "dead-end
street". A street which
meets another street at one end but is closed at the other,
such that little traffic will travel down it and the
property owners enjoy excellent privacy.
CUMULATIVE INTEREST:
The total amount charged as interest on a loan or mortgage
to a certain date.
CUSTOM
BUILDER:
A builder or developer who specializes in creating homes to
the specifications and requirements of individual land
owners. |