Real
Estate Glossary
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BACHELOR APARTMENT:
A small rental dwelling unit which combines living
and bedroom spaces into one room (and, sometimes,
kitchen space as well). Also known as "efficiency
suite" or "studio apartment".
BACK END RATIO:
A comparison of a borrower's monthly expenses to
her gross monthly income used to assess her ability
to carry a mortgage or other loan.
BACK TITLE LETTER (OR CERTIFICATE):
Notice by a Title Insurance Company to a person
searching and certifying title that a previous search
has been completed, setting out the status of title
of the property as at a given date such that the
person searching need only up-date the search.
BACKUP CONTRACT:
An Agreement of Purchase and Sale for a particular
property which is conditional (becomes binding)
upon the failure of another Agreement for the same
property.
BALANCE:
Often as in "balance due", the amount of principal
on a loan remaining to be paid at any given time.
BALANCE SHEET:
A table of figures showing the assets, liabilities
and net worth of a person or corporation on a given
date.
BALLOON (LOAN) MORTGAGE:
A loan which is repaid by a series of small, periodic
payments until a given date, when either the balance
comes due in a single, large payment or the amount
of the payments rises significantly.
BALLOON PAYMENT:
The single, large payment which pays out the balance
due on a balloon mortgage.
BANKRUPT:
A noun or adjective. Noun - a person or business
which has made an assignment in bankruptcy or has
been petitioned into bankruptcy. Adjective - owing
more money than you have assets or income to repay.
BANKRUPTCY:
The state of being unable to pay your debts such
that you submit yourself to the protection of the
state. A person or business may voluntarily assign
himself into bankruptcy or may be petitioned into
bankruptcy by his creditors. Once in bankruptcy,
the person surrenders his assets to a trustee in
bankruptcy who sells the assets for the benefit
of the bankrupt's creditors, first secured creditors
then unsecured creditors. Once a person is discharged
from bankruptcy, none of his former creditors may
pursue him for his former debts.
BASE RENT:
The set rent payable by a tenant under a lease,
to which is added Additional rents as required by
the lease (for common area maintenance, for example,
or for utilities).
BASIS POINT:
One 100th of 1%.
BEARER INSTRUMENT:
A valuable document (a bond or other security) which
does not bear the name of its legal owner; may be
redeemed by whoever is in possession of it.
BEDROOM COMMUNITY:
A neighborhood or area which offers little in the
way of employment opportunities but plenty of housing,
similar to a "suburb" or commuter town.
BEFORE-TAX CASH FLOW:
Gross amount of money available for the use of the
owner before taking into consideration taxes.
BEFORE-TAX INCOME:
A person or corporation's gross earnings before
taxes are deducted.
BELOW-MARKET INTEREST RATE (BMIR):
A subsidized interest rate on a mortgage or loan,
often provided by a government to allow for acquisition
of property or reduction in rents charged to tenants.
BENCHMARK:
A permanent feature on land which is used as a point
of reference for a land surveyor.
BENEFICIARY:
A person or corporate entity entitled to receive
money or assets from a trust or an estate under
a will.
BEQUEATH:
To leave an item of personal property to a certain
person in a will (see "Devise",
which refers to gifts of land in this context).
BEQUEST:
The item bequeathed under a will.
BETTERMENT:
The improvement of real estate that results in a
rise in market value. Also, a legal concept of civil
law: when a court award, judgment or order in favor
of an injured party places that party in a better
position than he would have been had his original
injury never taken place.
BIANNUAL:
Or semiannual. Occurring every six months or twice
per year.
BID:
An offer of a certain amount of consideration.
BIENNIAL:
Occurring once in every two years.
BILATERAL CONTRACT:
A contract which has a balance of consideration
promised by the parties, where each promises performance
of the contract.
BI-LEVEL:
A description of a house with two levels, where
the main entrance to the house is between the two
levels.
BILL OF SALE:
Documentary evidence that title to personal property
(chattels) has passed to the Purchaser for valuable
consideration.
BINDER:
1. A written commitment from an insurance company
to insure a property or a certain risk; or
2. A preliminary agreement to purchase a property
accompanied by a forfeitable deposit which is lost
if the purchaser does not complete the purchase
of the property.
BIWEEKLY LOAN OR MORTGAGE:
A loan which features payments equalling one half
of the usual monthly payment made every two weeks
(to total 26 in a year), thus substantially reducing
the life of the mortgage and the interest payable
over the life of the mortgage.
BLANKET INSURANCE POLICY:
A single insurance policy that applies to more than
one person or property.
BLANKET MORTGAGE:
Where one loan is secured against more than one
parcel of land.
BLENDED RATE:
Created when an old loan is refinanced and extended
at an interest rate which is different from the
original rate: the old debt is still payable at
the old rate; the new debt is payable at the new
rate; the total amount of the debt is payable at
a rate of interest that is somewhere between the
two rates.
BLIGHTED AREA:
An area of a community where the infrastructure
and buildings have been allowed to decay.
BLUEPRINT:
Construction plans, containing great detail about
the particular building.
BOARD OF EQUALIZATION:
United States government body with a mandate to
assure uniform property tax assessments.
BOILER PLATE:
A standard clause or provision in a contract which
appears in all similar contracts.
BONA FIDE:
Made in good faith, at fair market value, without
deceit or fraud.
BOND:
1. A sum of money paid into court as an assurance
of the performance of some requirement or as security
for payment on a claim. May be used to allow for
the removal of a claim for lien from a property
while the court action over the lien continues.
2. An interest-bearing instrument.
BORROWER (MORTGAGOR):
The person or company that receives money from a
lender (often a bank, credit union or trust company)
in exchange for a written promise to pay and a registered
lien on property.
BOTTOMLAND:
Low lying land, near a water course or in a valley
or similar geographic contour.
BOUNDARY:
Edge or limit of a property. See "property
line".
BREACH (OF CONTRACT):
A failure to meet one's obligations, whether under
a contract or otherwise. A breach of contract allows
the innocent party to enforce the contract, rescind
the contract or sue for damages.
BRIDGE FINANCING:
Also known as a "swing
loan", a loan used to fill a gap in financing,
often between the purchase of a new home and the
sale of the old one. If the purchase closes before
the sale, the home owner needs to borrow enough
money to pay for the new house for the period of
time before the equity in his old house comes available
as a result of the completion of the sale.
BRITISH THERMAL UNIT (B.T.U.):
A unit of heat or cooling. That required to change
the temperature of a pound of water by one degree
Fahrenheit.
BROKER:
An intermediary who brings parties together for
specific purposes. A mortgage broker brings borrowers
together with lenders; a real estate broker brings
purchasers together with vendors. Often charges
a percentage of the contract price as a fee. Specific
training required to become a Real Estate Broker,
a professional designation.
BROWNSTONE, BRICK ROW HOUSE, OR EASTERN TOWNHOUSE
A nineteenth-century-style row house, with up to
five storeys and a front stoop, verandah or porch
leading up to the front door.
BUDGET MORTGAGE:
A mortgage in which the borrower is required to
make periodic payments not only for interest and
principal, but also for insurance premiums and realty
tax installments.
BUFFER ZONE:
An area of land specifically designed to separate
one zoning use from another, such as separating
a residential neighborhood from an industrial area.
BUILD TO SUIT:
An offer by a landowner to develop the land in a
manner dictated by a potential tenant, in return
for a long-term lease from the tenant for the developed
land.
BUILDER WARRANTY:
An enforceable guarantee of the quality of construction
given by a builder or developer.
BUILDING CODE:
Set of regulations established by a municipality
to govern the standards of construction in that
municipality.
BUILDING LINE OR SETBACK:
The minimum distance a building or other improvement
may be constructed from a property line. May be
established by agreements, title documents or municipal
by-laws or ordinances.
BUILDING PERMIT:
A document obtained from the local government, allowing
for the construction of a structure in accordance
with the terms of the permit.
BUILDING RESTRICTIONS:
Limiting rules which may appear in building codes
or in title documents which control the size, placement,
materials, design or location of new construction.
BUILT-INS:
Items which could be chattels but which are installed
so as to form part of a building.
BUNGALOW:
A small, one-storey home built in a turn of the
century style, often with a prominent front verandah.
BUSINESS DAY:
A day in which normal business is transacted. Generally,
Monday to Friday but not weekends or holidays.
BUY-BACK AGREEMENT:
A contract between a purchaser and vendor in which
the vendor agrees to repurchase the property from
the purchaser if a certain event occurs within a
specified period of time. The buy-back price is
usually set out in the agreement.
BUY DOWN (ACCOUNT OR MORTGAGE):
The payment of extra money on a loan now so as to
reduce the interest rate over a given period or
over the life of the loan. This extra payment may
be made by the borrower, by the lender (as an incentive
to the borrower to borrow from the lender) or by
the vendor/builder (as an incentive to the borrower
to buy a certain property).
BUYER'S BROKER:
A real estate broker who contracts to represent
the interests of a person wishing to purchase a
home. (see also "selling
agent", "Purchaser's agent").
BUYER'S MARKET:
A condition of the real estate market where there
are more properties for sale than people interested
in buying them. Buyer's have more choice and less
competition for the available properties, resulting
in lower prices.
BUY-SELL AGREEMENT:
A pact between partners in a business or shareholders
in a company, obliging one to buy the other's interest
(and obliging the other to sell) upon the occurrence
of some event stated in the agreement.
BY-LAWS:
Rules enacted by a governing body of general application.