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Page 1 of 2 | 20 terms beginning with 'T'
As applied to real estate, an enforced charge imposed on persons, property
or income, to be used to support the State. The governing body in turn
utilizes the funds in the best interest of the general public.
A claim against real estate for the amount of its unpaid taxes.
Similar to a Payment Discount, but implies either an unusually large initial
rate discount or an attempt by the lender to lure an otherwise unqualified
borrower into the mortgage.
A type of joint tenancy of property that provides right of survivorship and
is available only to a husband and wife. Contrast with tenancy in common.
A type of joint tenancy in a property without right of survivorship.
Contrast with tenancy by the entirety and with joint tenancy.
The obligee for a cooperative share loan, who is both a stockholder in a
cooperative corporation and a tenant of the unit under a proprietary lease
or occupancy agreement.
A process by which a lender uses another party to completely or partially
originate, process, underwrite, close, fund, or package the mortgages it
plans to deliver to the secondary mortgage market.
As generally used, the rights of ownership and possession of particular
property. In real estate usage, title may refer to the instruments or
documents by which a right of ownership is established (title documents), or
it may refer to the ownership interest one has in the real estate.
A company that specializes in examining and insuring titles to real estate.
Protects lenders or homeowners against loss of their interest in property
due to legal defects in title. Title insurance may be issued to a
"mortgagee's title policy." Insurance benefits will be paid only to the
"named insured" in the title policy, so it is important that an owner
purchase an "owner's title policy", if he desires the protection of title
insurance.
A check of the title records, generally at the local courthouse, to make
sure the buyer is purchasing a house from the legal owner and there are no
liens, overdue special assessments, or other claims or outstanding
restrictive covenants filed in the record, which would adversely affect the
marketability or value of title.
Monthly debt and housing payments divided by gross monthly income. Also
known as Back-End Ratio.
Total obligations as a percentage of gross monthly income. The total expense
ratio includes monthly housing expenses plus other monthly debts.
Equity that results from a property purchaser giving his or her existing
property (or an asset other than real estate) as trade as all or part of the
down payment for the property that is being purchased.
Any means by which the ownership of a property changes hands. Lenders
consider all of the following situations to be a transfer of ownership: the
purchase of a property "subject to" the mortgage, the assumption of the
mortgage debt by the property purchaser, and any exchange of possession of
the property under a land sales contract or any other land trust device. In
cases in which an inter vivos revocable trust is the borrower, lenders also
consider any transfer of a beneficial interest in the trust to be a transfer
of ownership.
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