Real Estate Principles & Practices
Types of listing agreements
-Exclusive-right-to-sell listing -Exclusive-agency listings -Open listing
Factors affecting supply for real estate
-Labor force and construction & material cost -Government controls and financial policies
Factors affecting demand for real estate
-Population -Demographics -Employment and wage levels
Puffing vs Fraud
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Types of Buyer Agency Agreements
1. Exclusion buyer agency agreement 2. Exclusion agency buyer agency agreement 3. Open buyer agency
Three Basic methods used to describe real estate
1. Metes and bounds 2. Rectangular 3. Lot and block
Legal tests of a fixture
1. Method of annexation (permanence) 2. Adaptation to real estate 3. Agreement
3 ways to own a business
1. Proprietorship 2. Partnership 3. Corporation
Fee simple ownership personally
1. Severely 2. Co-ownership 3. Trust
Lien
A charge against property that provides security for a debt or an obligation of the property owner
Coinsurance clause
A clause in insurance policies covering real property that requires that the policyholder maintain homeowners insurance converge generally equal to at least 80% of the property's actual replacement cost
Trust
A fiduciary arrangement whereby property is conveyed to a person or institution, called a trustee, to be held and administered on behalf of another person, called a beneficiary. The one who conveys the trust is called the trustor
Latent Defect
A hidden structural defect that could not be discovered by ordinary inspections and that threatens the property's soundness or the safety of the inhabitants
Remainer
A person to whom the property will pass when the life estate ends
Cooperatives
A residential multiunit building whose title is held by a trust or corporation that is owned by and operated for the benefit of person living within the building, who are the beneficial owners of the trust or stockholders of the corporation, each possessing a proprietary lease
Competitive Market Analysis
A sales person can help the seller determine a listing price for the property by using a competitive market analysis
Leasehold estates
A tenants right to occupy real estate during the term of a lease; generally considered to be a personal property interest
Salesperson's compensation
Also known as brokerage fee,Computed as a percentage of the total sales price, flat fee or hourly rate
Freehold estates
An Estate in land in which ownership is for an indeterminate length of time, in contrast to a lease-hold estate
Express Agency
An agency relationship based on a formal agreement
Real Estate salesperson
Any person licensed to preform real estate activities on behalf of a licensed real estate broker
Deed restrictions
Are private restrictions that affect the use of the land
Areas of Real Estate Specialization
Brokerage, Licensee, Appraisal, Home Inspection, Property Manager, Financing, Title Agencies, Subdivision and Development, Counseling, Education
6 common law fiduciary duties
Care, obedience, loyalty, disclosure, accounting, confidentiality
Types of Housing
Condominium, Cooperative, PUD, MUD, Manufactured housing (mobile home)
Tenancy in common
Each tenant holds an undivided fractional interests in the property
Independent contractor versus employee
Employee- follows rules governing such matters as working hours, office routine, attendance at sales meeting, assignment of sales quotas, and adherence to dress code Independent contractor- Operates more independently, broker may control what the independent contractor does, the broker cannot dictate how to do it
Life Estate
Freehold estate limited in duration to the life of the owner or the life of some other designated person or persons
Salesperson licensing procedure
How to be Real Estate agent (look at notes)
Physical characteristics of real estate
Immobility, Indestructibility, Uniqueness
Implied Agency
Informal agency agreement
Encumbrance
Is a claim, charge, or liability that attaches to real estate
Dower
Is the life estate that a wife or husband has in the real estate of the deceased spouse
Eminent Domain
Is the right of the government to acquire privately owned real estate for public use
Easements
Is the right to use the land of another for a particular purpose
Fee Tail Estate
It is an estate that, instead of descending to the heirs as fee simple does, is limited to the "issue of the body" of the recipient-that is, the recipients biological children, but only for one generation
Township lines
Lines running east and west parallel to the base line and six miles apart
Units of land measurement
Mile=5,280 feet square mile= 640 acres acre=43,560 feet
Escheat
Not a limitation on ownership, it is an avenue by which the state may acquire privately owned real or personal property
Encroachment
Occurs when all or part of a structure illegally extends beyond the land of its owner or beyond the legal building lines
Ohio plat act
Owner of parcel divides it into two or more lots, any which of them is less than 5 acres, the owner must have the land surveyed and a plat prepared and recorded in the county recorders office.
Littoral Rights
Owners who land boarders commercially navigable lakes, seas, and oceans.
Real Property
Real estate plus the interest, benefits, and rights inherent with its ownership
Dual Agency
Representing both parties to a transaction, this is unethical unless both parties agree to it and its illegal in many states
Flood Insurance
Required on all types of buildings-residential, commercial, industrial, agricultural-for either the value of the property of the amount of the mortgage loan, subject to the maximum limits available
Types of real property
Residential Property, Commercial property, mixed-use, industrial property, agricultural property, special purpose property
Real Estate
Same as land wether natural or man-made
Economic characteristics of real estate
Scarcity, Improvements, Permanence of investment, Area preference
Time share ownership
Shared ownership between people
Canons of Ethics
Standards of professional conduct prescribed for lawyers and in their professional dealings
Fee simple/Fee simple defeasible
Subject to the occurrence or nonoccurrence of some specified event. two categories that lead into that are fee simple determinable and fee simple subject
Exclusion of tax on capital gain
TBD
Condominium
The absolute ownership of a unit in a multiunit or single unit building based on a legal description of the airspace the unit actually occupies, plus an undivided interest in the ownership of the common elements which are owned jointly with the other condominium unit owners
PITI
The basic monthly costs of owning a home: principle, interest, real estate taxes, and hazard insurance
Brokerage
The business of bringing together parties interested in making real estate transaction for a fee or commission
Bundle of legal rights
The concept of land ownership that means ownership of all legal right to the land for example possession, control within the law, and enjoyment
Land
The earths surface, extending downward to the center of the earth and upward infinentlu into space, including things permanently attached by nature, such as trees and water
Fee simple/Fee simple absolute
The highest interest in real estate recognized by law
Range Lines
The land on either side of a principal meridian is divided into six-mile-wide strips by lines that run north and south, parallel to the meridian. These north south strips of land are called ranges
Market Value
The most probable price that a property would bring in a fair sale
Post licensing Requiremtns
The new salesperson has one year after the issuance of a sales license to complete ten hours of classroom instruction on current issues relating to consumers, real estate practice, ethics, and real estate law. If proof of completion is not submitted within 12 months, the license will automatically be suspended with a one year grace period in which to complete instructions
Police Power
The power to enact legislation to preserve order, protect the public health and safety, and promote the general welfare of its citizens
Rights of surivorship
The right of a survivor of a deceased person to the property of said deceased. A distinguishing characteristic of a joint tenancy relationship
Sections
Township squares are subdivided into sections and subsections called halves and quarters that can be further divided. Each township contains 36 sections. Each section is one square mile or 640 acres.
Riparian rights
common law rights granted to owners of land along the course of a river, stream, or similar body of water
Reversionary interest
creator will recapture ownership when the life estate ends
Tenancy by the entirety
is a form of tenancy in which the owners are husband and wife
Ohio Real Estate Commission
the commission percentage is negotiable