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Glossary
of Terms
ACCELERATION
CLAUSE
- A clause in a promissory note, agreement of sale, or mortgage which gives the
lender the right to call all sums due and payable in advance of the fixed
payment date upon the occurrence of a specified event, such as a sale, default,
assignment or further encumbrance of the property. Usually the payee has the
option to accelerate the note upon default of payment of any installment when
due, provided he gives adequate notice and specifies a time within which the
defaulting party can cure the other breaches of provisions in the contract,
such as failure to pay taxes and assessments, or failure to keep the property
insured or in repair. The provision for acceleration must be expressly set
forth in the mortgage or agreement of sale document, otherwise, the right does
not exist. There should be a consistency between the acceleration provisions
stated in the mortgage and those stated in the promissory note.
ACCEPTANCE - The expression of
the intention of the person receiving an offer (offeree, usually the seller) to
be bound by the terms of the offer. The acceptance must be communicated to the
offeror and must be in writing to be enforceable. The retail buyer has the
right to revoke the offer anytime before the seller's acceptance.
ACQUISITION - The act of
becoming the owner of certain property; used also of the thing or property
acquired.
ACRE - A measure of land equaling 43,560
square feet; or 4,840 square yards; or 160 square rods; or a tract about 208.71
feet square.
ACRE FOOT OF WATER - A volume of water
that will cover an area of one acre to the depth of one foot: 43,560 cubic
feet.
ADMINISTRATOR - A person appointed
by the court to manage and settle the estate of a deceased person who has left
no will.
AFFIDAVIT - A written
declaration, sworn before an officer who has authority to administer oaths.
AGREEMENT OF SALE - A written
agreement whereby the purchaser agrees to buy certain real estate and the
seller agrees to sell upon terms and conditions set forth in the agreement.
AMORTIZATION - Liquidation or
gradual retirement of a financial obligation by periodic installments.
AMORTIZATION PERIOD - The period of time
for economic recovery of the net investment in a project. This period is the
lesser of 1) the period of time over which the plan can be expected to serve a
useful purpose, or 2) the period of time when further discounting of beneficial
and adverse effects will not appreciably influence design.
APPRAISAL - A written estimate
and opinion of value; a conclusion resulting from the analysis of facts.
APPRAISER - One qualified by
education, training, and experience who is hired to estimate the value of real
and personal property based upon experience, judgment, facts, and the use of
the formal appraisal processes.
APPRECIATION - An increased
conversion value of property or mediums of exchange due to economic or related
causes which may prove to be either temporary or permanent. ASSESSED VALUATION
An assessment of property values, by a unit of Government, for purposes of
taxation.
ASSESSMENT - A charge against
real estate made by a unit of government to cover a proportionate cost of an
improvement, such as street or-sewer.
ASSETS - All valuable
things owned by a person, corporation, or other entity, encumbered or not.
ASSIGNMENT (OF TEASE) - A transfer to another of rights, interest, or claim in
or to real or personal property. The party who assigns or transfers his
interest is the assignor, and the assignee is the one to whom the assignment is
made.
ASSUMPTION AGREEMENT - An undertaking of
a debt or obligation primarily resting upon another person.
ASSUMPTION OF MORTGAGE - The taking of
title to property by a grantee wherein he assumes liability for payment of an
existing note secured by a mortgage or deed of trust against the property. He
becomes a co-guarantor for the payment of the mortgage or deed of trust along
with the original maker of the note, who is not released from his
responsibility.
ATTACHMENT - The legal process
of seizing the real or personal property of a defendant in a law suit, by levy
or judicial order, and holding it in the custody of the court as security for
satisfaction of the judgment.
ATTORNEY IN FACT - A person
authorized to perform certain acts for another person, under power of attorney.
BALLOON PAYMENT - A final payment on
a note. It is usually substantially larger than any of the preceding
installments.
BENEFICIARY - A person who
receives and benefits from the gifts or acts of another, such as one who is
designated to receive the proceeds from a will or trust.
BEQUEATH - To leave personal
property to another by will. To leave real property by will is to devise.
BILL OF SALE - A written
instrument transferring title, right, and interest in personal property to
another.
BINDER - An agreement to
cover an earnest money deposit for the purchase of real property as evidence of
the purchaser's good faith and intention to complete the transaction.
BLANKET MORTGAGE - A single mortgage
which covets more than one piece of real estate.
BOND - Any obligation under seal. A real
estate bond is a written obligation, usually issued on security of a mortgage
or a trust deed.
BREACH OF CONTRACT - Violation of any
of the terms or conditions of a contract without legal excuse.
CASH VALUE - The actual money
that an Asset will bring on the open market without any lengthy delay.
CAVEAT EMPTOR - "Let the
retail buyer beware" is Latin. Summarizes the rule that the retail buyer
must examine, judge and test merchandise/property for himself.
CERTIFICATE OF TITLE - A document stating
that title to a particular property is clear. It is prepared by an attorney or
qualified person who has examined the abstract of title, but is not to be
confused with title insurance. It is only an opinion that title is good.
Usually given to a homeowner with the deed.
CLEAR TITLE - A title free and
clear of all encumbrances.
CLOSING STATEMENT - An accounting by a
broker of funds in a real estate sale, made to the seller and to the retail
buyer.
CLOUD ON TITLE - An outstanding
claim or encumbrance which would affect or impair the owner's title, if valid.
A judgment or dower interest.
COMPARABLE - Properties listed
in an appraisal report which are substantially equivalent to the subject
property, comparable in selling price, rental, income or similar measure.
COMPENSABLE INTEREST - Interest of
parties that is to be compensated.
COMPLIANCE INSPECTION - Inspection of
outgrants, military and civil, for compliance with terms of the outgrant and to
review management/development of the property, particularly of outgrants which
provide services to the general public.
COMPOUND INTEREST - Interest paid both
on the original principal and on interest accrued from the time it fell due.
CONCESSION - A privilege
granted to an individual by the Government, to sell food, etc., on Government
land.
CONTRACT - An agreement,
either oral or written to do or not to do certain things. In real estate, there
are many different types of contracts, including listings, contracts of sale,
options, mortgages, assignments, leases, deeds, escrow agreements, and loan
commitments, among others.
CONTRACT RENT - Payment for use of
property, as specified in a lease.
CONVENTIONAL MORTGAGE - A mortgage on real
estate securing a loan made by a private investor, not guaranteed by a
Government agency such as FHA or VA.
CONVEYANCE - The transfer of
title to real property by means of a written instrument, such as a deed.
COOPERATIVE - Multi-unit
building owned by a corporation, each owner holding stock equal to the value of
his apartment. Title is proprietary lease.
COST OF REPRODUCTION - The normal cost of
exact duplication of a property with the same or closely similar materials as
of a certain date or period.
COURSES AND DISTANCES - A method of
describing or locating real property; this description gives a starting point
and the direction and lengths of lines to be run; practically indistinguishable
from a metes and bounds description.
COVENANT - A written
agreement in a deed which pledges that either party will perform or abstain
from specified acts on a certain property, or which specifies or forbids
certain uses of the property.
CURTESY - The common law
life estate of a husband to land his wife possessed in fee at her death. This
interest has been abrogated as modified by statute in many states.
DAMAGES - Compensation or
indemnity recovered through the courts by any person who has suffered loss,
detriment or injury to person, property or rights. A sum of money awarded to a
person injured by an act of another. May be compensatory or punitive.
DEBT SERVICE - Periodic payment
on a debt, for interest on and retirement of the principal.
DECLARATION OF TAKING - Part of a
condemnation package; a document stating the need for the property, describing
the property, and stating that the property is being taken by eminent domain.
Filing the declaration in court, with the deposit of estimated compensation,
transfers title to the condemner.
DEDICATION - The application of
privately-owned land to the public for no consideration, with the intent that
the land will be accepted and used for public purposes. A landowner may
dedicate the entire fee simple interest, or an easement such as a public
right-of-way across his property. Lands thus dedicated are normally taxed at a
preferential rate.
DEED - A legal instrument in writing, duly
executed, sealed, and delivered, whereby the owner of real property (grantor)
conveys to another (grantee) some right, title, or interest in real estate.
DEED RESTRICTION - A provision in a
deed controlling or limiting the use of the land.
DEFAULT - Failure to perform
a specific, required legal duty.
DEFERRED MAINTENANCE - Existing but
unfulfilled requirements for repairs and rehabilitation, deferred until a later
date.
DEFICIENCY JUDGMENT - At a foreclosure
sale, the difference between the indebtedness sued upon and the sale price or
market value of the real estate. See also DEFICIENCY PAYMENT.
DEFICIENCY PAYMENT - Additional compensation
required in a final judgment in condemnation proceedings. See also DEFICIENCY
JUDGMENT.
DEPRECIATION - (1) A lowering of
value. A reduction; lessening. The decline in value of property. Loss in market
value. Deterioration over a period of time. The opposite of appreciation. (2)
In appraising, depreciation is the reduction on value of a property as measured
from the cost to replace it. It is the difference between the replacement cost
and the market value. (3) In accounting, it is a write-off (usually annually)
of a portion of an asset on the records.
DESCENT - Succession to
ownership of an estate by inheritance. Title by which one person, upon death of
another, acquires real estate of the latter as an heir at law. The person who
inherits is controlled by state statutes.
DESIGN MEMORANDUM - A planning
document prepared by the division/District Commander before any land may be
acquired for a project.
DETERIORATION - Impairment of
condition. One of the causes of depreciation and reflecting the loss in value
brought about by wear and tear, disintegration, use in service, and the action
of the elements.
DEVISE - A transfer of real
property under a will. The donor is the devisor and the recipient is the
devisee. Where there is no will, the real property "descends" to the
heirs.
DISCOUNT - (1) That which can
be taken off the established amount. Mortgages, for example, are frequently
discounted when paid in advance of maturity. (2) A sum paid to obtain certain
preferred mortgages, as the payment of points to a lending institution for FHA
and VA mortgages.
DISPOSAL - An authorized
method of permanently divesting the Government of control and responsibility
for real and personal property. Sale of Government-owned property.
DISPOSSESS - To deprive a person
of possession and/or use of real property.
DOWER - A common law estate in land given to
the wife in her husband's real property upon his death, consisting of a life
estate in one-third of all the real estate owned by the husband during the
marriage.
DURESS - Forcing action or
inaction against a person's will.
EASEMENT - A privilege or
right which the owner of one parcel of land may have to use or enjoy the lands
of another, i.e., a right-of-way.
EASEMENT APPURTENANT - An easement which
is attached to, accompanies, and passes with a greater interest; it has no
existence apart from the superior interest. Also called PERTAINING EASEMENT.
EARNEST MONEY - The cash deposit
made by a purchaser of real estate as evidence of good faith.
ECONOMIC LIFE - The period over
which a property will yield a return on the investment, over and above the
economic or ground rent due to land.
ECONOMIC OBSOLESCENCE - Impairment of
desirability or useful life arising from economic forces, such as changes in
optimum land use, a legislative enactment which restrict or impair property
rights, and changes in supply-demand relationships.
EFFECTIVE AGE - Age in years,
indicated by the condition and utility of a structure.
EJECTMENT - A form of action
to regain possession of real property, with damages for the unlawful retention.
ELEVATION - Surveying: The
distance above or below a datum. Architecture: A sketch of the front or side of
a building.
EMBLEMENTS - Growing crops
(called "fructus industriales") which are produced annually through
labor and industry. Emblements are regarded as personal property even prior to
harvest; thus, a tenant has the right to take the annual crop, even if the
harvest does not occur until after his tenancy has ended. A landlord cannot
lease his land to a tenant farmer and then terminate the lease without giving
the tenant the right to re-enter to harvest his crops.
EMINENT DOMAIN - The right of the
government, both state and federal, to take private property for a necessary
public use, with just compensation paid to the owner. Through eminent domain,
the state may acquire land (either fee, leasehold, or easement) for streets,
parks, public buildings, public rights-of-way, and the like. The state may
delegate the power of eminent domain to local governments and to public
corporations and associations such as school districts. No private property is
exempt from this exercise of government power.
ENCROACHMENT - Trespass; the
building of a structure or any improvements partly or wholly intruding upon the
property of another.
ENCUMBRANCE - Any claim, lien,
charge or liability attached to and binding upon real property which may lessen
the value of the property but will not necessarily prevent transfer of title.
There are two general classifications of encumbrances: (1) those that affect
the title, such as judgments, mortgages, mechanic's liens and other liens which
are charges on property used to secure a debt or obligation; and (2) those that
affect the physical condition of the property such as restrictions,
encroachments, and easements.
ENDANGERED SPECIES - Plants and animals
which are in danger of extinction throughout a significant portion of their
ranges, as listed by U.S. Department of Interior.
ENGINEERING FEASIBILITY STUDY - Evaluation of a proposed
construction at a particular site, to determine whether the proposed project is
economically, structurally, and environmentally feasible.
ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT - A written
evaluation, made early in the planning process, of the potential environmental
impact of a proposed action.
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT - Analysis of a
proposed action; the basis for deciding whether the proposed action will have a
significant impact on the environment.
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT - A detailed, full-disclosure
report pursuant to National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA). An EIS
identifies and analyzes the anticipated environmental impact of a proposed
action, discusses how adverse effects will be mitigated.
EQUITY - In real estate,
the interest or value of the real estate over and above the amount of the
indebtedness thereon.
EQUITY OF REDEMPTION - Also known as
Statutory Redemption or Redemption. The right of the mortgagor, before a
foreclosure sale, to reclaim property which has been forfeited due to mortgage
default. The mortgagor can redeem the property by paying the full debt, plus
interest and cost. Takes place in Title Theory states.
EROSION - Wearing away land
through processes of nature, for example by streams and wind.
ESCALATION CLAUSE - A clause in a
lease which causes a rent increase, contingent on a specific action.
ESCHEAT - The reverting of
property to the state by reason of failure of person legally entitled to hold
or when heirs capable of inheriting are lacking.
ESCROW - In real estate, it
is the state or condition of a deed which is conditionally held by a third
party, called the escrow agent, pending the performance or fulfillment of some
act or condition.
ESCROW AGREEMENT - A written
agreement between two or more parties whereby the grantor, promisor or obligor,
delivers certain instruments or property into the hands of a third party, the
escrow agent, to be held by said third party until the happening of a
contingency or performance of a condition, and then to be delivered to the
grantee, promisee, or obligee.
ESTATE - In real estate it
refers to the degree, quantity, nature, and extent of interest which a person
has in real property, such as a fee simple absolute estate, an estate for
years.
ESTATE AT SUFFERANCE - An estate in land
arising when the tenant wrongfully holds over after the expiration of his term;
the landlord has the choice of evicting the tenant as a trespasser or accepting
such tenant for a similar term and under the conditions of the tenant's previous
holding; often called a tenancy at sufferance.
ESTATE FOR LIFE - A freehold estate,
not of inheritance, but which is held by the tenant for his own life or the
life or lives of one or more other persons, or for an indefinite period that
may extend for the life or lives of persons in being, and beyond the period of
life.
ESTATE FOR YEARS - An interest in
land for a fixed period of time, from one day upwards; often called a tenancy
for years.
ESTATE FROM PERIOD TO PERIOD - An interest in
land where there is no definite termination date but the rental period is fixed
at a certain sum per week, month or year; often called tenancy from year to
year.
ESTATE IN REVERSION - The residue of an
estate left in the grantor to commence in possession after the termination of
some particular estate.
ESTOPPEL - A legal doctrine
which prevents one from asserting rights that are inconsistent with a previous
position or representation.
ESTOVERS - Wood which a
tenant is allowed to take from the landlord's premises for the necessary fuel,
implements, repairs, etc., of himself and his (resident) servants. ET AL. -
Abbreviation for et alii, Latin meaning and others. ET UX. - Abbreviation for
et uxor, meaning and wife.
ET VIR - Latin meaning and
husband.
EVICTION - Dispossession by
process of law; the act of depriving a person of the possession of lands he has
held pursuant to a judgment of the court.
EXCESS - Designates real
property which is no longer required by the Federal agency accountable for it.
EXCESSING - The process of
determining that real estate is not needed by the Army; reporting excess
property to the disposal agency for disposal.
EXCHANGE - Disposal of any
real interest by exchanging it for another real interest of equal value instead
of cash.
EXCLUSIVE LEGISLATIVE JURISDICTION - Jurisdiction under
which the Federal Government holds all the authority of a state legislate over
a particular area, except authority to serve process in cases arising from
occurrences outside of the area.
EXECUTOR - An individual or
institution designated in a will and appointed by a court to settle the estate
of the testator.
EXPERT WITNESS - Persons with
particular knowledge or skill which enables them to give an opinion on the
facts in dispute.
FAIR MARKET VALUE - Legal term
synonymous with MARKET VALUE.
FEE - When applied to property, an
inheritable estate in land.
FEE SIMPLE - The most
comprehensive ownership of real property known to law; the largest bundle of
ownership rights possible in real estate. Fee simple title is sometimes
referred to as "the fee".
FEE TAIL - An estate or
interest in land which cannot be conveyed but which must descend to the heirs
of the holder; abolished in most states.
FIRST MORTGAGE - The mortgage on
property that is superior in right to any other mortgage.
FIXTURE - A chattel which is
affixed to and becomes a part of real property.
FORECLOSURE - Procedure whereby
property pledged as security for a debt is sold to pay the debt in event of
default in payments or terms.
FOREIGN EXCESS REAL ESTATE - Excess real
property located outside the U.S., Puerto Rico, American Samoa, Guam, the Trust
Territory of Pacific Islands, or Virgin Islands. May not include timber or
installed equipment. Check regulations for definition of real estate at each
location: Japan - USARJ 405-1; Korea - USFK 405-7; Europe - USAREUR 405-8.
FORFEIT - Loss of money,
property, or the right to property by failure to act or by negligent or
improper action. Property lost is called a forfeiture.
FRAUD - The intentional perversion of truth
to deceive another person, whereby that person acts upon it to his legal
injury.
FREEHOLD - An estate in fee
simple or for life.
FRONT FOOT - One foot along the
street frontage of a property.
FUNCTIONAL OBSOLESCENCE - A loss in value of
an improvement due to functional inadequacies, often caused by age or poor
design. For example, functional obsolescence may be attributable to such things
as outmoded plumbing or fixtures, inadequate closet space, poor floor plan,
excessively high ceilings or antiquated architecture. Thus a warehouse with
nine foot ceilings would probably suffer a loss in value because a modern
forklift could not operate in such a small space.
GENERAL LIEN - A lien which
attaches to all property owned by the debtor.
GENERAL WARRANTY - A covenant in the
deed whereby the grantor agrees to protect the grantee against the world.
GRADUATED LEASE - A lease that
provides for the varying rental rate, often based upon future determination;
sometimes rent is based upon result of periodic appraisals; used largely in
long-term leases.
GRADUATED RENTAL SYSTEM - A concession lease
in which lessee's percentage rental fluctuates with the ratio of his gross
income to gross fixed assets. Also provides for a nonrefundable Fixed Minimum
Rental (FMR). Percentage rental is offset against the FMR.
GRANT - The act of conveying or transferring
real property, the operative words in a conveyance of real estate are to
"grant, bargain, and sell". The grantor (the person who conveys the
real estate) delivers the grant, in the form of a deed, to the grantee.
GRANTEE - Entity to whom a
grant is made, or to whom real estate is conveyed. The retail buyer.
GRANTOR - Entity who makes a
grant, conveys real estate by deed. The seller.
GROSS INCOME - The projected
annual income from operation of a business or from management of a property.
GROSS RENT MULTIPLIER - Ratio of sales
price to monthly rental income for single family residential properties.
GROUND LEASE - A lease to use
land for a stated period; may be secured by improvements which the tenant will
provide.
GUIDE ACQUISITION LINE - A line on the map
accompanying a design memorandum showing the tentative boundaries of the land
to be acquired for a project.
HABENDUM CLAUSE - The "to have
and to hold" clause which defines or limits the quantity of the estate
granted in the pre of the deed.
HAZARDOUS MATERIALS - See CONTAMINATION.
HECTARE - A metric surface
measure: 10,000 square meters or 2.471 acres.
HEREDITAMENTS - Every sort of
inheritable property, such as real, personal, corporeal, and incorporeal.
HIGH WATERLINE - The line of high
water at ordinary tides.
HOLDING AGENCY - The Federal agency
accountable for a piece of property.
HOLDOVER TENANT - A tenant who remains
in possession of leased property after the expiration date of the lease term.
HOME STEAD - A home that is
used as a personal residence. where there is homestead protection, the
homeowner generally files a homestead declaration with the county recorder,
setting forth his marital status, describing the land and estimating the value
of the homestead. The homestead is then exempt from creditor's claims up to the
statutory amount.
IMPROVEMENTS - An addition to
land which costs labor or capital (buildings, pavements, etc.), more or less
permanently attached. More than repair or replacement.
INCOME PROPERTY - Property owned or
purchased primarily for the monetary return it will bring. It may be classified
as commercial, industrial, or residential.
INDEMNIFY - To protect against
or keep free from loss/ damage. To insure. To repay for loss/damage. To
compensate for loss, reimburse.
INDUSTRIAL INSTALLATION - Active or inactive
industrial facility held by the Department of the Army for production of
weapons, systems, munitions, components, and supplies.
INGRANT - Property acquired
for Army or Air Force used by lease, license, or permit; not fee.
INLEASING - The leasing of
real estate interests therein, and improvements thereon for military and civil
works purposes. Generally, also leasing of land/improvements by the Corps for
other Government agencies.
INSTALLATION - Land and
improvements controlled by the Department of the Army and used by Army
organizations for Army functions.
INSTALLED BUILDING EQUIPMENT - Equipment and
furnishings required to make a building usable and attached as a permanent part
of the structure (e.g., docks, overhead crane., etc.).
INSTALLMENT CONTRACT - Purchase of real
estate upon an installment basis; upon default, payments are forfeited. Often
called a LAND CONTRACT, the deed to the property is not given to the purchaser
until either all or a certain portion of the purchase price has been paid.
INSTRUMENT - A written legal
document created to effect the rights of the parties.
INTEREST RATE - The rate of return
on an investment, specifically, the rate charged on borrowed money.
INTERNAL CONTROL - The organization
and methods within a Federal agency which guard against fraud, waste, abuse,
and mismanagement of resources.
INTESTATE - A person who dies
having made no will, or one defective in form; in which case, his estate
descends to his heirs at law or next of kin.
INVOLUNTARY LEN - A lien imposed
against property without consent of the owner; example: special assessments and
Federal income tax.
JOINT AND SEVERAL - An obligation
which binds two or more persons individually and jointly. This type of
obligation can be enforced by joint action against all or separate actions
against one or more.
JOINT TENANCY - Co-ownership of
real property by two or more persons, whereby the joint tenancy have equal
interest, accruing by the same conveyance, commencing at the same time, and
held by equal and undivided possession. Joint tenancy includes the right of
survivorship, by which interest of a deceased tenant passes to survivors.
JUDGMENT - The final
determination of the rights and liabilities of the parties in an action, as
decreed by a court.
JUNIOR LIEN - A lien placed upon
property after a previous lien has been made and recorded.
JURISDICTION - The authority to
legislate within a geographically defined area; authority to enact general
municipal legislation over that particular area.
JUST COMPENSATION - Market value paid
for real estate taken in a condemnation action.
LAND MANAGEMENT - Planning and
execution of programs to use, improve and maintain land and water areas for the
greatest net public benefit, while supporting the assigned mission. Includes
forest and wildlife management, agriculture and grazing leasing, outdoor
recreation, etc.
LAND SURVEYING - Location and
identification of a parcel of land by a professional surveyor or engineer.
LANDLORD - One who rents
property to others.
LEASE - A written document by which the
owner transfers the rights of use and occupancy of land and/or structures to
another person or entity for a specified period of time in return for a
specified rental.
LEASEHOLD - The interest or
estate which a lessee has in real property by virtue of his lease.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION - A statement
containing a designation by which land is identified according to a system set
up by law or approved by law.
LEGISLATIVE JURISDICTION - Authority to
legislate within a geographically defined area; the same as jurisdiction. Types
of jurisdiction are exclusive, concurrent, and partial.
LESSEE - A person/entity to
whom property is rented under terms of a lease.
LESSER INTERESTS - Interest in land
that is less than fee.
LESSOR - A person who rents
property under a lease; the landlord.
LIABILITY - Any drawback,
debt, or obligation. Something that acts as a disadvantage. An obligation or
duty that must be performed. The opposite of asset.
LICENSE - Authority to enter
or use another person's land or property, without possessing estate in it;
revocable. Would otherwise constitute a trespass.
LIEN - A hold or claim which one person has
upon the property of another as a security for some debt or charge.
LINK - Surveyor's linear measure. 1 link =
7.92 in. 100 links = 1 chain (66.6 feet)
LIS PENDENS - A public notice,
filed against specific lands, that an action at law is pending that may affect
the title to the land.
LITTORAL RIGHTS - The right of an
owner of land with a shoreline contiguous to a sea or lake to use and enjoy the
shore without a change in its position created by artificial interference; as
distinguished from riparian rights and water rights.
LOCUS - A particular parcel of land; used to
refer to an already specified property.
MAJOR CONCESSION - A commercial
concession entirely on project land with gross fixed assets or annual gross
income over $150,000. See also, COMMERCIAL CONCESSION, MINOR CONCESSION, MIXED
CONCESSION.
MARKET PRICE - The price paid
regardless of pressures, motives, or intelligence.
MARKET VALUE - The price at which
a willing seller would sell and a willing retail buyer would buy, neither being
under abnormal pressure. MARKETABLE OR MERCHANTABLE TITLE A title which is free
from reasonable doubt of defect which can be readily sold or mortgaged to a
reasonably prudent purchaser or mortgagee; a title free from material defects
or grave doubts and reasonably free from possible litigation.
MEAN SEA LEVEL - Average sea level
position, midway between average high and average low water. Used as a standard
for measurement of heights in the past; now replaced by the National Geodetic
Vertical Datum (NGVD) in most of the country.
MECHANICS LIEN - A statutory lien
to secure payment to materialmen and mechanics for materials and services used
to repair, improve, or maintain real property.
MEETING OF MINDS - A mutual intention
of two persons to enter into a contract affecting their legal status based on
agreed-upon terms. One of the essential elements of a contract whereby the
parties consent to be bound by the exact terms of the contract.
METES AND BOUNDS - A common method of
land description that identifies a property by specifying the shape and
boundary dimensions of the parcel, using terminal points and angles. A metes
and bounds description starts at a well marked point of beginning and follows
the boundaries of the land by courses and metes (measures, distances measures,
distances and compass direction) and bounds (landmarks, monuments) and returns
to the true point of beginning. A description which fails to enclose an area by
returning to the point of beginning is defective.
MINERAL RIGHTS - The right to
extract minerals from land. Does not include right to use the surface of the
land to conduct mineral extraction. This must be obtained from the surface
owner.
MINOR CONCESSION - A commercial
concession entirely on project land with gross fixed assets or annual gross
income under $150,000. See also, COMMERCIAL CONCESSION, MAJOR CONCESSION, MIXED
CONCESSION.
MIXED CONCESSION - A commercial
concession on project and private land. See also, COMMERCIAL CONCESSION, MAJOR
CONCESSION, MINOR CONCESSION.
MONUMENT - A natural or
manmade fixed object used as a permanent reference point for surveying or to
mark land ownership boundaries.
MONUMENTS DESCRIPTION - A method of
describing property by referring to objects (monuments) on the boundaries.
MORTGAGE - A legal instrument
pledging a described property for repayment of a loan under certain terms.
MORTGAGE BROKER - An individual or
firm that makes mortgage loans on its own behalf, with its own funds, usually
expecting to re-sell the loans to lenders at a profit.
MORTGAGEE - one to whom a
mortgage is made; the lender.
MORTGAGOR - One who makes a
mortgage, the borrower.
MULTIPLE USE - Integrated
management of all natural resources to achieve optimum use and enjoyment, while
balancing environmental qualities, ecological relationships, and esthetic
values.
NATURAL RESOURCES - Viable and/or
renewable products of nature; natural environments of soil, air and water;
plants and animals on grasslands, rangelands, croplands, forest, lakes, and
streams.
NAVIGATION SERVITUDE - Public right of
navigation for the use of the people at large.
NEGOTIABLE - A promissory note,
or similar instrument, is said to be negotiable if title to the instrument, and
the money it represents, can be transferred by mere endorsement and delivery by
the holder, or by delivery only.
NET INCOME - in general,
synonymous with net earnings, but considered a broader and better term; the
balance remaining, after deducting from the gross income all operating
expenses, maintenance, taxes, and losses pertaining to operating properties
excepting interest or other financial charges on borrowed or other capital.
NET LEASE - A lease agreement
whereby the lessee pays all property charges (taxes, insurance, maintenance) in
addition to rent. Local market customs and terms vary, in some areas,
"net, net" and "net, net, net" are used.
NONEXCESS PROPERTY - Property required
for an Army mission but proposed for sale: the proceeds would fund acquisition
of replacement land or facilities. Authority to sell non-excess property is
found at 10 U.S.C. 2667a.
NONUSABLE CONDITION - Describes a
facility which is unserviceable because of deterioration, because it requires
extensive restoration, or because it is dangerous to equipment or to the health
and safety of personnel.
NOTE - A written instrument acknowledging a
debt and promising payment.
NOTICE TO QUIT - A written notice
from a landlord to a tenant that the tenant must vacate the premises at the end
of the term or immediately, if the lease is at will.
OBLIGATION - Legal reservation
of funds based on known requirements (a contract, for example), or an a
realistic estimate of costs.
OBLIGOR - One who places
himself under a legal obligation to an obligee.
OBSOLESCENCE - As applied to real
estate it is the loss of value due to structural, economic, or social changes
becoming outmoded.
OFFER - A promise by one party to act in a
certain manner provided the other party will act in the manner requested. The
offeror is the one who makes the offer to the offeree.
OFFSET STATEMENT - A statement by the
owner of property or owner of a lien against property, setting forth the
present status of liens against said property. OPEN-END MORTGAGE - A mortgage
containing a clause that permits the mortgagor to borrow money after the loan
has been reduced without rewriting the mortgage.
OPTION - A privilege,
acquired for a consideration, of demanding within a specified time the carrying
out of a transaction upon stipulated terms. The optionor grants an option to an
optionee.
ORDER OF POSSESSION - Court order in a
condemnation which allows the Government to enter and use lands.
OUTGRANT - Government term
for the interest or right granted to one to use Government real property by a
lease, easement, license, or permit.
OUTLEASING - The leasing of
Army-controlled real property which is temporarily not required for mission
purposes.
OUTSTANDING RIGHTS - Encumbrances,
obligations, or liens on property. The Government may take such property
subject to the outstanding rights or may eliminate them. OVER-IMPROVEMENT - An
improvement to land that is more extensive or costly than needed. As an
example, the erection of a thirty-story office building where fifteen would
have been adequate for the present and foreseeable future needs of the business
community. The resulting empty space provides no return to the owner. The
market value of the property, as well as the surrounding land, is
correspondingly lessened. Also called a misplaced improvement.
OWNER IN EQUITY - owner is
responsible for repairing or replacing improvements to the property that are
damaged (i.e., loss by fire, damages due to flood, etc.).
PARTIAL LEGISLATIVE JURISDICTION - Authority granted
by a state to the Federal Government to legislate over an area, while the state
reserves the right to exercise, alone or concurrently with the Federal
Government, other authority greater than the right to serve civil or criminal
process.
PARTIAL TAKING - Taking of part of
a property for public use, under power of eminent domain. Compensation must be
paid, considering damages and/or special benefits to the remainder property.
PARTITION - The dividing of
common interests in real property owned jointly by two or more persons. It
sometimes happens that one of several tenants in common or joint tenants
desires to sell the property while the other tenants think it best to hold on
to the investment. If the parties cannot reach an agreement, an action in
partition is often the solution. The main purpose is to provide a means by
which people, fording themselves in an unwarranted common relationship, can
free themselves from the relationship.
PATENT - An instrument by
which the Federal Government conveys public land to an individual.
PERCENTAGE LEASE - A lease whereby
rental is a percentage of gross or net income from sales or services. Such a
lease often guarantees a minimum or maximum rent, regardless of business
volume.
PERCOLATION - The flow of
sub-surface water through land. A measure of percolation shows how much water
the land can absorb.
PERMANENT CONSTRUCTION - A building
suitable and appropriate to serve a specified purpose for at least 25 years
with a minimum of maintenance.
PERMIT - A privilege,
revocable at will, granted to another Federal agency to use real property for a
specific purposes; confers no possessory interest.
PERSONAL PROPERTY - All physical
objects of a personal or movable nature subject to ownership, except real
estate (real property). See also PROPERTY and REAL PROPERTY.
PERSONALTY - Personal property,
movable property, chattels. See also PERSONAL PROPERTY.
PHOTOGRAMMETRY - The science of
surveying and mapping using aerial photographs and stereographic plotters.
PLAT - Map of town, section, or
subdivision, showing location and boundaries of individual properties.
PLOT - A piece of land.
POINT - A measure for charges on a loan
amounting to one percent of the loan. One point is therefore one percent of the
subject loan.
POINT OF COMMENCEMENT - A remote
established point from which the true point of beginning can be identified.
POLICE POWER - The right of the
Government to enact legislation deemed necessary to protect and-promote public
health, safety, and welfare. In real estate, may be interpreted as the right to
limit exercise of property rights without compensation (e.g., zoning).
PORTABLE BUILDING - A building
designed for the continuing purpose of being easily moved intact from one
location to another; usually kept in one location for a short time. Portable
buildings are not items of realty and are not reported as real property inventory.
POSSESSORY INTEREST - Outgrant interests
of private corporation and individuals to land that the Federal Government has
withdrawn from county assessor's rolls.
POWER OF ATTORNEY - An instrument
authorizing someone to act as another person's agent or attorney. The agent is
attorney in fact, and his power is revoked at the death of the principal by
operation of law. Power of attorney may be general or special.
PREPAYMENT PENALTY - Penalty for the
payment of a mortgage or deed of trust note before it actually becomes due.
PRESCRIPTION - The acquiring of
aright in property, usually in the form of an intangible property right such as
an easement or right-of-way, by means of adverse use of property that is
continuous and uninterrupted for the prescriptive period.
PRICE - The amount paid in legal tender,
goods, or services; the consideration; purchase price. The terms for which a
thing is done.
PRINCIPAL - Amount of a loan
balance. In a mortgage payment of principal and interest, the principal repays
the loan.
PRIVATE ORGANIZATION - A self-sustaining,
non-Federal entity, constituted or established and operating on Federal
property, by individuals acting outside any official capacity in the Federal
Government.
PROGRAM ANALYSIS AND RESOURCE REVIEW - The PARR document
identifies and explains new programs and changes to existing programs.
Twenty-eight major commands and other agencies submit material to the PARK.
PROGRAM AND BUDGET GUIDANCE - The PBG provides
guidance on manpower and dollars from HQDA to general operating agencies.
MACOMs use this guidance to prepare the PARR and COB. The PBG is published in
January, May, and October and relates to the President's budget, the POM, and
the OSD budget, respectively.
PROGRAM OBJECTIVE MEMORANDUM - The POM document
presents the proposed Army program to the Office of the Secretary of Defense.
It presents planned activities and the personnel and obligation authority
required over a 5-year period to build, operate, and maintain this proposed
program.
PROJECT PLANNING - Planning of real
estate acquisition.
PROPERTY - The rights or
interests a person has in the thing he owns; not, in the technical sense, the
thing itself. These rights include the right to possess, to use, to encumber,
to transfer and to exclude, commonly called the bundle of rights. In modern
understanding, however, property has come to mean the thing itself to which
certain ownership rights are attached. Property is either real or personal.
PROPERTY NOT UTILIZED - All or part of a
property not used for current program purposes of the accountable agency, or
occupied in caretaker status only.
PROPERTY UNDERUTILIZED - All or part of a
property used only irregularly or intermittently by the accountable agency for
current program purposes, or used for current program purposes that require
only a portion of the property.
PROPRIETARY INTEREST - Rights of the
Federal Government as property owner in a state. Rights conferred by virtue of
ownership.
PUBLIC DOMAIN LANDS - Land or interest
in land owned by the United States and administered by the Secretary of the
Interior through the Bureau of Land Management, without regard to how the land
was acquired, except for the Outer Continental Shelf and lands held for the
benefit of Indians, Aleuts, Eskimos. Also known as public lands.
PURCHASE MONEY MORTGAGE - A mortgage given
by the grantee to the grantor, on the same land and concurrently with the
conveyance, to secure the unpaid balance of the purchase price.
QUALIFIED FEE - An estate in fee
simple but bound by limitations imposed by the grantor.
QUARTERS - All housing
facilities which are supplied by specific Department of the Army direction as
incidental service in support of Government programs and for which rent and
fees are charged the occupant.
QUIET ENJOYMENT - A right, granted
by covenant in a deed or lease, of a grantee or tenant to enjoy possession of
the premises without interference.
QUIET TITLE - Court action
brought to establish title and to remove a cloud on the title.
QUITCLAIM DEED - A deed of
conveyance with conveys to the grantee without warranty of title whatever
interest, title, or claim the grantor possesses.
RANCHO - Grants of land to
individuals dating back to the Spanish-Mexican governments. A large tract of
land suitable for grazing horses or cattle.
RANGE - A strip of land six miles wide, as
determined by Government survey and running in a north-south direction.
REAL ESTATE - See REAL PROPERTY.
REAL PROPERTY - Land and anything
built on, growing on, or affixed to land. See also PROPERTY, PERSONAL PROPERTY.
REALTY - A term sometimes
used as a collective noun for real property or real estate.
REASSIGNMENT - The action of
changing Jurisdiction over real estate from one command or agency to another
within the Department of the Army.
RECAPTURE CLAUSE - A clause in leases
or deeds which gives the landlord the right to terminate if certain conditions
or standards are not met. In a percentage lease, the landlord has the right to
cancel if a specific minimum volume of business is not maintained. Also, a
clause in Government outgrants which allows the Government to reacquire
(recapture) the property if needed for national defense.
RESCISSION OF CONTRACTS - The abrogating or
annulling of contracts. the revocation or repealing of a contract by mutual
consent by parties to the contract, or for cause by either party to the
contract.
RECTANGULAR SURVEY SYSTEM - Often called the
United States Government Survey System; a method of describing or locating real
property by reference to the Government survey. Used in about 30 states.
REDEMPTION - The right to
redeem property during the foreclosure period; the right of an owner to redeem
his property after a sale for taxes. Often referred to as Equity of Redemption.
RELATED FURNISHINGS - Property which is
not fixed to or part of a building: furniture, furnishings, equipment.
RELEASE - The discharge or
relinquishment of a right, claim or privilege. Since a formal release is a
contract relieving a person from any further legal obligation, it must contain
a valuable consideration.
RELEASE OF LIEN - The discharge of
certain property from the lien of a judgment, mortgage, or claim.
RELICTION - Addition or
accretion to land by gradual subsidence of water.
RELOCATABLE BUILDING - A building designed
to be readily moved, assembled, disassembled, stored, and reused; a trailer
type building, but not a mobile trailer. Usually considered personal property.
RELOCATION ASSISTANCE - Benefits and
assistance for Persons whose property is acquired under Title II of PL 91-646.
The Acs provides payment for moving and related expenses, replacement housing
for owners and tenants, relocation assistance advisory, and last resort
housing.
REMAINDER - An estate which
vests after the termination of the prior estate, such as a life estate. It is
created at the same time and by the same instrument as another estate and
limited to arise immediately upon the termination of the other estate.
RENT - A compensation, either in money,
provisions, chattels, or labor, received by the owner of real estate from the
occupant.
REPLACEMENT COSTS - Cost of a building
with equivalent utility but with modern materials and eliminating deficiencies
of the building it replaces.
REPRODUCTION COSTS - Cost of building
an exact duplicate of a structure, including deficiencies.
REPROGRAMMING - Transfer of funds
from one appropriation account to another, for purposes different from the
original appropriation.
RESERVATION - A right reserved
by an owner in the grant (sale or lease) of a property.
RESERVED PUBLIC LANDS - See WITHDRAWN
PUBLIC LANDS.
RESIDUAL ESTATE - That which remains
of a testator's estate after deducting the debts, bequests, and devises.
RESTRICTION - A limitation upon
the use or occupancy of real estate, placed by covenant in deeds or by public
legislative action.
RESTRICTIVE COVENANT - A clause in a deed
limiting the use to which the property may be put.
REVERSION - The residue of an
estate left in the grantor to commence in possession after the determination of
some particular estate granted out by him. The return of land to the grantor
and his heirs after the grant is over.
REVERSIONARY INTEREST - The interest that
a person has in lands or other property upon the termination of the preceding
estate.
REVOCATION - The recall of a
power or authority conferred, or the vacating of an instrument previously made.
RIGHT OF SURVIVORSHIP - The distinctive
characteristic of a joint tenancy (also tenancy by the entirety) by which the surviving
joint tenants) succeeds to all right, title, and interest of the deceased joint
tenant without the need for probate proceedings.
RIGHT-OF-ENTRY - A written
instrument, binding on all parties, which provides authority to enter on
certain premises to perform specified acts, without acquiring any estate or
interest in the property.
RIGHT-OF-WAY - The right or
privilege, acquired through accepted usage or by contract, to pass over a
designated portion of the property of another. A right-of-way may be private,
as in an access easement given a neighbor, or public, as in the right-of-way to
use the highways and streets.
RIPRAP - Loose stone piled
on an embankment or slope to prevent erosion or washing-out.
RIPARIAN OWNER - One who owns land
bounding upon a river or water course.
RIPARIAN RIGHTS - The right of a
landowner to water on, under, or adjacent to his land, for general purposes,
wharfing, and access to navigable waters. The rights of an owner of land on the
bank of a stream or river.
SALE-LEASEBACK - A situation where
the owner of a piece of property wishes to sell the property and retain
occupancy by leasing it from the retail buyer.
SALES CONTRACT - A contract by
which retail buyer and seller agree to the terms of the sale.
SATISFACTION OF MORTGAGE - An instrument for
recording and acknowledging payment for an indebtedness secured by a mortgage.
SCREENING - Circulation of
notice within the Army of real property which is no longer required by one Army
organization but may be required and useful to another.
SEA LEVEL - See MEAN SEA
LEVEL.
SEAL - An embossed impression on paper
authenticating a document or signature (e.g., corporate or notary seals). The
letters L. S. after the signature are Latin, locus sigilli, meaning "place
of the seal." It is good practice to require a corporate seal on a
contract as evidence that the contract is the act of the corporation and
executed by duly authorized officers.
SECONDARY FINANCING - A loan secured by
a second mortgage or trust deed on real property.
SECTION - As used in the
Government Survey System, a section of land is an area one mile square,
containing 640 acres. It is 1/36th of a township.
SECURITY INTEREST - An interest in
personal property or fixtures, obtained to ensure payment owed as performance
of an obligation.
SEDIMENTATION RANGES - Upstream range
lines for compiling data on erosion or sediment build-up.
SEISIN (SEIZIN) - Actual possession
of property by one who claims rightful ownership of a freehold interest
therein. A person is seized of property when he is in rightful possession with
the intention of claiming a freehold estate.
SEMI-PERMANENT CONSTRUCTION - A building
appropriate for a specific purpose for a limited period (more than 5 but less
than 25 years), with a moderate to high level of maintenance.
SEPARATE PROPERTY - Property owned by
a husband or wife which is not community property; property acquired by either
spouse prior to marriage or by gift or devise after marriage.
SERVITUDE - A charge or burden
on one estate to the benefit or advantage of another.
SEVERALITY OWNERSHIP - Sole ownership.
Owned by one person only.
SEVERANCE DAMAGES - Payment to an
owner for diminution in the value of a remainder area in a partial acquisition,
caused by the acquisition (severance) or by construction of improvements.
SINKING FUND - A fund in which
equal monthly or annual deposits, with compound interest, accumulate to a
predetermined amount at a calculated time, for the purposes of paying a debt or
replacing improvements.
SITE - A parcel of land, sufficiently
improved to be used as a building lot or for other purposes requiring an
improved site.
SPECIAL WARRANTY DEED - A deed in which
the grantor warrants or guarantees the title only against defects arising
during his ownership of the property and not against defects existing before
the time of his ownership.
SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE - A remedy which the
court will grant, in certain cases, compelling the defendant to perform or
carry out the terms of a valid, existing agreement or contract.
STATUTE OF FRAUDS - State law which
provides that certain contracts must be in writing to be enforceable contracts
for real estate are included in this class of contract.
SUBDIVISION - Any land which is
divided or is proposed to be divided for the purpose of disposition into two or
more lots, parcels, units, or interests.
SUBJECT TO MORTGAGE - The taking of
title to Property by a grantee, wherein he is not responsible to the holder of
the promissory note for the payment of any portion of the amount due. In the
event of foreclosure, the most that he can lose is his equity in the property.
The original maker of the note is not released from his responsibility.
SUBLETTING - A leasing by one
tenant to another, who holds the right of use and occupancy subject to the
original lease; the sublessee.
SUBORDINATE - To make subject
to, or junior to.
SUBORDINATION CLAUSE - A clause in a
mortgage or lease stating that rights of the holder shall be secondary or
subordinate to a subsequent encumbrance.
SUBROGATION - Replacing one
person with another in regard to a legal right, interest, or obligation.
Substitution, such as a mortgage holder's selling his rights and interest to
another.
SUBSURFACE RIGHTS - Ownership rights
to water, minerals, gas, oil, and similar substances lying beneath the surface
of a parcel of real estate.
SURETY - One who guarantees
the performance of another; the guarantor.
SURFACE RIGHTS - Ownership rights
in a parcel of real estate that are limited to the surface and do not include
air above the property (air rights) or minerals below the surface (subsurface
rights).
SURPLUS REAL ESTATE - Real property
owned by the United States not required for the discharge of responsibilities
of any Federal agencies, thus determined by the GSA Administrator to be excess.
SURRENDER - The cancellation
of a lease by mutual consent of lessor and lessee.
SURVEY - The act by which
the quantity and boundaries of a piece of land are ascertained; the paper
containing a statement of the courses, distance, and quantity of land is also
called a survey.
SUSTAINED YIELD - The production
rate of renewable resources an area of land or water can maintain at a given
intensity of management.
TACKING - An-adverse
possessor has passed his rights to another and his time of possession counts
for the new possessor.
TAX DEED - A deed given where
property has been purchased at a sale to the public of property for nonpayment
of taxes.
TAX LIEN - A government claim
for unpaid real estate tax.
TAX SALE - A sale of
property, usually at auction, for nonpayment of taxes assessed against it.
TEMPORARY CONSTRUCTION - A building
suitable and appropriate to fill a need for a short period (5 years or less)
without regard to level of maintenance, the designs and details of which
provide a minimum facility with maximum initial economy.
TENANCY IN COMMON - Co-ownership of
real property by two or more persons, each entitled to possession according to
his proportionate share. Unlike joint tenancy, there is no right of survivorship.
See also JOINT TENANCY, TENANCY BY ENTIRETY, RIGHT OF SURVIVORSHIP.
TENANCY BY THE ENTIRETY - Joint ownership by
husband and wife, created by conveyance to husband and wife, who possess the
property jointly. The property goes entirely to the survivor and is liable only
for joint debts of husband and wife, not individual debts. Divorce severs the
tenancy. See also JOINT TENANCY, TENANCY IN COMMON RIGHT OF SURVIVORSHIP.
TENANT - One who holds or
possesses land or tenements by any kind of title, either in fee, for 'life, for
years, or at will. In a popular sense, the one who has temporary use and
occupation of lands or tenements which belong to another, the duration and
other terms of whose occupations are usually defined by a lease, while the parties
thereto are placed in the relationship of landlord and tenant.
TENANT AT SUFFERANCE - One who comes into
possession of lands by lawful title but keeps them afterwards without any
title, after his interest has ended.
TENANT AT WILL - A license to use
or occupy lands and tenements at the will of owner, but for no fixed term. The
tenancy can be terminated at will by the owner.
TENURE IN LAND - The mode or manner
by which an estate in lands is held.
TERM - The extent of time for which an
estate is granted. For example, the period which is granted for the lessee to
occupy the premises; it does not include the time between making the lease and
the tenant's entry.
TERMINATION - End of a lease or
contract, usually before the anticipated time; termination may be by mutual
agreement or by exercise of one party of a legal remedy due to default of the
other party.
TERMINATION FOR CAUSE - Termination of an
outgrant because of the lessee's violation of a condition of the grant.
TERMINATION AT WILL - Termination of an
outgrant at will by the lessor. All Army outgrants may be terminated at will.
TESTATE - The condition of
one who leaves a valid will at their death.
THREATENED SPECIES - Plants and animals
likely to become endangered species, as listed by the Department of Interior,
within the foreseeable future and throughout a significant portion of their
ranges.
TIMBER MANAGEMENT - Production and
identification of salable wood products from forests on a sustained yield
basis: sawtimber, pulpwood, poles, ties, posts, piling, and other products.
TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE - One of the
essential requirements to the forming of binding contract; it contemplates a
punctual performance.
TITLE - The right to or ownership of lands.
Also, the evidence of ownership. Title to property encompasses all the bundle
of rights an owner possesses.
TITLE INSURANCE - Indemnity against
loss or damage resulting from defects in or liens on a title at the date of the
insurance.
TOPO (GRAPHIC) MAP - A map showing
physical features and relative elevations of the area surveyed. The elevations
are graphically depicted by contour lines.
TOWNSHIP - A territorial
subdivision, six miles long, six miles wide, and containing thirty-six
sections, each one mile square.
TRACT - An area of land contained in one
description.
TRACT I OWNERSHIP DATA - A historical
record of a particular tract of land, confirmed by the owner or someone
familiar with the land and recorded on ENG Form 900.
TRADE FIXTURES - Articles of
Personal property annexed to real property but which are necessary to the
carrying on of a trade and are removable by the owner.
TRANSFER - Change of
jurisdiction over real property from one Federal agency or department to another,
including military departments and defense agencies.
TRUE POINT OF BEGINNING - The point from
which a legal description of property begins and ends.
TRUST DEED OR DEED OF TRUST - A deed conveying
land to a trustee as collateral security for the payment of a debt; upon
payment of a debt secured thereby, the deed of trust is released; upon default,
the trustee has the power to sell the land and pay the debt.
TRUSTEE - One why holds
property in trust for another to secure the performance of an obligation.
UNDERIMPROVEMENT - Improvement
inadequate to support the highest/best use of the site. May be a structure of
lower cost, smaller size, or lesser quality than those typical of the
neighborhood.
UNDERUTILIZED - The
characteristics of underutilized project lands are: (1) Development of only a
small amount of total land; (2) Development behind schedule; (3) Failure to
meet annual management objectives; (4) Low or declining public use; (5) Unused
recreation facilities.
UNDUE INFLUENCE - Taking any
fraudulent or unfair advantage of another's weakness in mind, distress, or
necessity.
USURY - On a loan, claiming a rate of
interest greater than that permitted by law.
UTILITY - The usefulness of
a property; its ability to satisfactorily function for the purpose for which it
was intended.
UTILIZATION INSPECTION - An inspection of
project lands buildings, and related facilities to determine if the property is
being put to optimum use.
VACATED PREMISES - Property from
which all military personnel and missions have been vacated.
VALID - Having force, or binding force;
legally sufficient and authorized by law.
VALUATION - The act or process
of estimating value; the amount of estimated value.
VALUE - Ability to command goods, including
money, in exchange; the quantity of goods, including money, which should be
commanded or received in exchange for the thing valued; utility; desirability.
As applied to a property value may be broadly defined as "the present
worth of all the rights to future benefits arising from ownership".
VARA - A Spanish, Portuguese, and Latin
American unit of linear measure, varying from 32 to 43 inches. Also a square
vara, as a unit of area.
VENDEE - A purchaser; a
retail buyer; the person to whom a thing is rendered or sold.
VENDOR - The person who
transfers Property by sale.
VOID - That which is unenforceable; having
no force or effect.
VOIDABLE - That which is
capable of being adjudged void but is not void unless action is taken to make
it so.
VOLUNTARY LIEN - Any lien placed
upon property with consent of, or as a result of, the voluntary act of the
owner.
WAIVER - The renunciation,
abandonment, or surrender of a right, claim, or privilege.
WARRANTY DEED - A deed that
contains a covenant that the grantor will protect the grantee against any
claimant.
WASTE - Willful destruction of any part of
the ;and which would injure or prejudice the landlord's reversionary right.
WATERLINE - High waterline is
the point on the shore to which the tide normally rises; varies. Low waterline
is the lowest point of tide, from which the tide does not ebb; varies.
WETLANDS - Land areas that
are inundated by surface or ground water with sufficient frequency to support
vegetable or animal life that requires hydric soils for growth and
reproduction.
WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT - Application of
scientific and technical principles to wildlife populations and habitats so as
to maintain such populations for ecological, scientific, or recreational
purposes.
WITHDRAWN LANDS (withdrawn public lands) - Public domain held
back for the use or benefit of an agency by reservation, withdrawal, or other
restrictions for a special government purpose.
ZONING - The public
regulation, through police power, of the character and extent of real estate
use. Uniform restrictions on improvements, building height, density of
population, and other factors regulate the use and development of private
property. |