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To voluntarily give up a legal right or claim.
The voluntary giving up of a right or claim.
A document to evidence such a relinquishment.
A physical examination of the property which
usually takes place immediately prior to closing to ensure that
no changes have taken place and no new damage has been done to the
property. May also be used to confirm that fixtures and chattels
included in the sale remain on the premises.
A small apartment building with rental units
on upper floors and no elevator. The tenant literally has to walk
up to her apartment unit.
A large building used for receiving and storing
goods, materials or merchandise.
Charge to a borrower to cover the costs of
the lender taking short term loans from other lenders to cover the
borrower's mortgage.
The process of assembling mortgages for sale
to the secondary mortgage market.
A signed statement which guarantees the condition
or continued usefulness of an asset or guarantees the truth of the
facts set out in the statement. The person signing is legally liable
if the statement turns out to be untrue or if the asset proves in
worse condition than stated.
Allowing or causing a property to suffer
damage or undue wear and tear to the detriment of another person
who has an interest in or claim to the property.
1. (With "The"), A classic American
poem of the early 20th Century by Thomas Stearns Eliot.
2. A property which cannot be developed for profitable use.
Any conduit of running water which occurs
naturally on land: a river, stream, brook.
The legal right to use water from a water
course or body of water on a property.
The natural accumulation of water either
above or below ground, often used for well purposes. May also refer
to the distance from the surface of the land to the location of
the water.
:
The term for the reduction in value of an
asset resulting from normal use.
An alternative to the more traditional monthly
payments on a loan or mortgage. Results in faster pay-down of principal,
lower total interest paid.
Lands restricted for development as a result
of their proximity to bodies of water and the fact that they are
occasionally or often flooded. May also be environmentally sensitive.
A written statement of a person's wishes
for the disposition of that person's estate after their death.
:
The movement of funds from one place to another
electronically.
:
See "termite report".
A requirement by a local government body
for work to be performed on a property so as to bring it into conformance
with local regulations.
A secondary financing option in which new
money borrowed is blended with money already owed and registered
on title to the property. A second mortgage is registered as security
for the new money but the old mortgage remains in existence and
the rate of interest is a blend of the rate chargeable on the old
mortgage and the rate chargeable on the newly borrowed money.
A claim or lien which is registered with
the local enforcement officer to enforce a judgement of a court.
The officer is then required to enforce the judgment against the
judgment debtor and any property owned by that debtor in the jurisdiction.
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