CA Broker Exam V.8
VARIABLE INTEREST RATE
(VlRs or VMRs, Variable Mortgage Rates.) An interest rate in a real estate loan which by the terms of the note varies upward and downward over the term of the loan depending on money market conditions.
TRANSFER FEE
A charge made by a lending institution holding or collecting on a real estate mortgage to change its records to reflect a different ownership.
TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE
A condition of a contract expressing the essential nature of performance of the contract by a party in a specified period of time.
TIME-SHARE PROJECT
A form of subdivision of real property into rights to the recurrent, exclusive use or occupancy of a lot, parcel, unit, or segment of real property, on an annual or some other periodic basis, for a specified period of time.
VENDEE
A purchaser; buyer.
TITLE REPORT
A report which discloses condition of the title, made by a title company preliminary to issuance of title insurance policy.
WARRANTY OF AUTHORITY
A representation by an agent to third persons that the agent has and is acting within the scope of authority conferred by his or her principal.
TIME-SHARE ESTATE
A right of occupancy in a time-share project (subdivision) which is coupled with an estate in the real property.
VENDOR
A seller.
TERMITE SHIELD
A shield, usually of noncorrodible metal, placed on top of the foundation wall or around pipes to prevent passage of termites.
THRESHOLD
A strip of wood or metal beveled on each edge and used above the finished floor under outside doors.
YARD
A unit of measurement 3 feet long.
UNDERIMPROVEMENT
An improvement which, because of its deficiency in size or cost, is not the highest and best use of the site.
TERMITES
Ant-like insects which feed on wood and are highly destructive to wooden structures.
VOLUNTARY LIEN
Any lien placed on property with consent of, or as a result of, the voluntary act of the owner.
TORT
Any wrongful act (not involving a breach of contract) for which a civil section will lie for the person wronged.
TRADE FIXTURES
Articles of personal property annexed by a business tenant to real property which are necessary to the carrying on of a trade and are removable by the tenant.
URBAN PROPERTY
City property; closely settled property.
WEAR AND TEAR
Depreciation of an asset due to ordinary usage.
WATER TABLE
Distance from surface of ground to a depth at which natural groundwater is found.
TITLE THEORY
Mortgage arrangement whereby title to mortgaged real property vests in the lender. Some states give greater protection to mortgage lenders and assume lenders have title interest. Distinguished from Lien Theory States.
TOPOGRAPHY
Nature of the surface of land; topography may be level, rolling, mountainous. Variation in earth's surface.
UTILITIES
Refers to services rendered by public utility companies, such as — water, gas, electricity, telephone.
VOIDABLE
That which is capable of being adjudged void, but is not void unless action is taken to make it so.
UTILITY
The ability to give satisfaction and/or excite desire for possession. An element of value.
ZONE
The area set off by the proper authorities for specific use; an area subject to certain restrictions or restraints.
UNIT-IN-PLACE METHOD
The cost of erecting a building by estimating the cost of each component part, i.e., foundations, floors, walls, windows, ceilings, roofs, etc., (including labor and overhead).
YIELD
The interest earned by an investor on an investment (or by a bank on the money it has loaned). Also, called return.
TENURE IN LAND
The mode or manner by which an estate in lands is held. All rights and title rest with owner.
TRUTH IN LENDING
The name given to the federal statutes and regulations (Regulation Z) which are designed primarily to insure that prospective borrowers and purchasers on credit receive credit cost information before entering into a transaction.
VACANCY FACTOR
The percentage of a building's space that is not rented over a given period.
VOID
To have no force or effect; that which is unenforceable.
WAINSCOTING
Wood lining of an interior wall; lower section of a wall when finished differently from the upper part.
WARRANTY DEED
A deed used to convey real property which contains warranties of title and quiet possession, and the grantor thus agrees to defend the premises against the lawful claims of third persons. It is commonly used in many states but in others the grant deed has supplanted it due to the modern practice of securing title insurance policies which have reduced the importance of express and implied warranty in deeds.
WRAP AROUND MORTGAGE
A financing device whereby a lender assumes payments on existing trust deeds of a borrower and takes from the borrower a junior trust deed with a face value in an amount equal to the amount outstanding on the old trust deeds and the additional amount of money borrowed.
TIME-SHARE USE
A license or contractual or membership right of occupancy in a timeshare project which is not coupled with an estate in the real property.
VA LOAN
A loan made to qualified veterans for the purchase of real property wherein the Department of Veteran's Affairs guarantees the lender payment of the mortgage.
ZONING
Act of city or county authorities specifying type of use to which property may be put in specific areas.
TRADE-IN
An increasingly popular method of guaranteeing an owner a minimum amount of cash on sale of owner's present property to permit owner to purchase another. If the property is not sold within a specified time at the listed price, the broker agrees to arrange financing to personally purchase the property at an agreed upon discount.
X
An individual who cannot write may execute a legal document by affixing an "X" (his/her mark) where the signature normally goes. Beneath the mark a witness then writes the person's name and signs his or her own name as witness.
VESTED
Bestowed upon someone; secured by someone, such as title to property.
TRUST DEED
Just as with a mortgage this is a legal document by which a borrower pledges certain real property or collateral as guarantee for the repayment of a loan. However, it differs from the mortgage in a number of important respects. For example, instead of there being two parties to the transaction there are three. There is the borrower who signs the trust deed and who is called the trustor. There is the third, neutral party, to whom trustor deeds the property as security for the payment of the debt, who is called the trustee. And, finally, there is the lender who is called the beneficiary, the one who benefits from the pledge agreement in that in the event of a default the trustee can sell the property and transfer the money obtained at the sale to lender as payment of the debt.
TIDELANDS
Lands that are covered and uncovered by the ebb and flow of the tide.
TESTATOR
One who makes a will.
VERIFICATION
Sworn statement before a duly qualified officer to correctness of contents of an instrument.
TORRENS TITLE
System of title records provided by state law (no longer used in California)
YIELD RATE
The yield expressed as a percentage of the total investment. Also, called rate of return.
VENEER
Thin sheets of wood.
WAIVE
To relinquish, or abandon; to forego a right to enforce or require anything.
VALID
Having force, or binding force; legally sufficient and authorized by law.
TITLE
Indicates "fee'' position of lawful ownership and right to property. "Bundle of Rights" possessed by an owner. Combination of all elements constituting proof of ownership.
TITLE INSURANCE
Insurance to protect a real property owner or lender up to a specified amount against certain types of loss, e.g., defective or unmarketable title.
UNDERWRITING
Insuring something against loss; guaranteeing financially.
TRUSTEE
One who holds property in trust for another to secure the performance of an obligation. Third party under a deed of trust.
THIRD PARTY
Persons who are not parties to a contract which affects an interest they have in the object of the contract.
VALUE
Present worth of future benefits arising out of ownership to typical users/investors.
UNDUE INFLUENCE
Use of a fiduciary or confidential relationship to obtain a fraudulent or unfair advantage over another's weakness of mind, or distress or necessity.
WILL
A written, legal declaration of a person expressing his or her desires for the disposition of that person's property after his or her death.
TRUST ACCOUNT
An account separate and apart and physically segregated from broker's own funds, in which broker is required by law to deposit all funds collected for clients.
UNEARNED INCREMENT
An increase in value of real estate due to no effort on the part of the owner; often due to increase in population.
UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE
Establishes a unified and comprehensive method for regulation of security transactions in personal property, superseding the existing statutes on chattel mortgages, conditional sales, trust receipts, assignment of accounts receivable and others in this field.
VALUATION
Estimated worth or price. Estimation. The act of valuing by appraisal.
TOWNSHIP
In the survey of public lands of the United States, a territorial subdivision six miles long, six miles wide and containing 36 sections, each one mile square, located between two range lines and two township lines.
USURY
On a loan, claiming a rate of interest greater than that permitted by law.
TOWNHOUSE
One of a row of houses usually of the same or similar design with common side walls or with a very narrow space between adjacent side walls.
TRUSTOR
One who borrows money from a trust deed lender, then deeds the real property securing the loan to a trustee to be held as security until trustor has performed the obligation to the lender under terms of a deed of trust.
TENTATIVE MAP
The Subdivision Map Act requires subdividers to submit initially a tentative map of their tract to the local planning commission for study. The approval or disapproval of the planning commission is noted on the map. Thereafter, a final map of the tract embodying any changes requested by the planning commission is required to be filed with the planning commission.
WASTE
The destruction, or material alteration of, or injury to premises by a tenant.
VALLEY
The internal angle formed by the junction of two sloping sides of a roof.
TENANTS BY THE ENTIRETIES
Under certain state laws, ownership of property acquired by a husband and wife during marriage, which property is jointly and equally owned. Upon depth of one spouse it becomes the property of the survivor.