Archive for the 'Real Estate 101' Category
Acquiring Real Estate Properties.
June 24th, 2008 Categories: Real Estate 101
The purchase (sale) of a property is the usual way of obtaining real estate properties. However there are other methods one can acquire or transfer real estate.
These other methods are:
1. By Deed: All deeds must have a “granting” clause in order for an act to transfer a property.
- Grant deeds transfer title, again with the action word being “grant”.
- Quitclaim deeds convey all the present rights or interest that a person may have in a property. A quitclaim deed gives absolute ownership or only such titles as one may hold.
Subsets of a grant or quitclaim deeds are:
- gift deed: given as a gift; no other consideration is necessary but can be revoked if done to defraud creditors.
- tax deed: given if property is sold as payment for past due taxes.
- administrator’s deed: given to the purchaser of the deceased person’s real property.
- sheriff’s deed: granted to the purchaser of a court ordered sale.
- trustee’s deed: given to the purchaser of property at a trust deed foreclosure sale.
- guardian’s deed: used by a guardian to transfer the real property of minors or incompetents.
- land patent: used by the government to grant public land to an individual.
2. By Transfer via Will: this written document outlines how a person’s is to be conveyed or distributed upon their death.
- The will can be witnessed (typed) is generally prepared by an attorney, dated, signed by the property owner and declared to be a will by at least two witnesses.
- A holographic will is entirely handwritten by the owner, dated and signed.
3. By Probate Transfer: is a superior court procedure to determine a will’s validity, any creditors’ claims and establish the identity of the beneficiaries.
4. By “No Will” Transfer: this procedure can be complex. If no heirs the property goes to the state. If descendant leaves a wife and child the property is divided 50/50; if there is a surviving spouse and two or more children 1/3 of the property goes to the spouse and 2/3 goes to the children. If no surviving spouse the property is divided equally amongst the children.
5. By Accession: This occurs when there is an addition to the property by natural cause. For example: If one lives near a stream or river (waterway) and over the years there is an accumulation or addition to the land, this accumulation becomes real property of the landowner who holds title to the river bank.
6. By Occupancy: this occurs through abandonment; adverse possession or prescription (by use).
- Abandonment is the relinquishing of a right or interest with the intention of never again reclaiming it. Court action is required to gain title.
- Adverse possession: title is acquired to another’s property through continuous and notorious occupancy under a claim of title. Courts require substantial proof before a title insurance company can insure a property with a clear title. This is often called a “quiet title” action.
- Prescription: is an easement, or the right to use another’s land, which can be obtained through five years of continuous use. Prescription is the “use” of a property, not a title.
7. By Dedication: is a gift of land, by its owner, for some public use. To be fully dedicated the land must be accepted by the authorized public officials.
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Real Estate Ownership.
June 22nd, 2008 Categories: Real Estate 101
Listed below are the types of ownership (estates) that one may have, the methods of holding title and methods of transferring the property.
Ownership is the interest, share, right or equity that has and varies say from the rights of a renter. Ownership gives full maximum rights of a full owner.
Fee Simple. Fee simple is the greatest interest one can hold in a property. It is perptual, freely transferable and inheritable.
Conditions can be placed on fee simple estates by the grantor. For example a condition may be imposed on a property donated to the State on the condition that the State agrees to build a college on the site. If the State disagrees, the transfer does not take place. Technically this condition describes a condition precedent. An action must be performed before title is transferred.
A condition subsequent gives the grantor (giver) the right to terminate if no action has occurred in a designated time frame. For example if the condition stipulated that the State had to start the building of a college in five years and no action has been taken in the building, the property goes back to the grantor.
A Fee Simple Determinable is when it is determined that a certain act has to be carried out. If the property owner donates the land to the State “so long as” the land is used for a college. If the State uses the land for some other purpose it automatically goes back to the grantor.
Life Estate. This represents an ownership that only exists for the life of a designated person(s). The intent usually is to provide a lifetime residence for an individual. For example I know of a husband and wife who granted a life estate to a very close friend. Upon their death their daughter inherited the property but the parents in a will designated that their friend have the right to live in the residence until her death. At the friends death it goes back to the daughter.
The person holding a life estate cannot grant more rights than they hold. The life tenant:
- has the right of physical possession of the property;
- has the right to rents and profits, but this terminates when the life estate holder dies;
- can usually lease, sell or finance the property, but not beyond the time frame of the life estate;
- is obligated to keep the property in good repair. The person is not required to make improvements;
- may not damage or destroy any permanent part of the property to the detreiment of succeeding interests; and
- is usually responsible for all annual costs and expenses. In the example of the parents, their friend was responsible for all real estate property taxes, insurance and the normal expenses faced by a home owner (not the daughter).
Data Source: California Principles by Walt Huber.
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Ok–So You Own The Property. But– Hey! There Are Others Using It! How Can That Be?
June 22nd, 2008 Categories: Real Estate 101
You own the property but others may and do use it. This use may be legal or illegal.
How does this come about? Access to your property may be by easements (generally legal), building restrictions, zoning (generally legal) and encroachment (may at times be illegal).
And who are these other people that can have access your property? They may be people reading meters or the telephone company checking lines.
How does this happened? Again by easements, zoning (and building restrictions) and encroachment. A brief glimpse as to what these mean is summarized below.
Easements onto your property are the most common.
Basically an easement is the right to use another’s land. It is an interest in another’s land owned by another person consisting in the right to use or control the land, or an area above or below it, for a specific, limited purpose. An easement is not a lien. When there is an easement it is considered encumbered.
One kind of easement is an Easements that run with the land (appurtenant). This means the easement belongs to or runs with the property and when sold the new owner has the same rights to the easement as the seller.
Generally an appurtenant easement is created for and benefits the owner of adjoining or attached land.
Example: A neighbor works or lives behind your property and uses your driveway. The owner of the front parcel cannot block or hinder the right to the property of this neighbor. This easement is created for and benefits the adjoining property (neighbors property).
Easements are created by grant (writing); implication by law; and long use (called perscription).
- Grant easements have to be notarized and recorded to be effective (considered as an easement).
- Implication by law, ie., the right to use land for the extracting minerals, oil implies that you have the right of surface entry in order to extract the minerals.
- Long use (gain by perscription) can be obtained after 5 years of uninterrupted use of another’s land; no confrontation or property tax payments required. Long use necessitates the following:
- Open and notorious use
- Uninterrupted use for 5 years
- Without permission of the owner (called hostile)
- Under a claim of right.
2. Building Restrictions and Zoning.
These easements are usually included in the deed at the time the property is subdivided, or may be created by a written contract.
Their main purpose is to keep use of the land uniform throughout certain tracts (or areas) of land. Subdivisions and condominiums usually include deed restrictions as a method to promote the aesthetics and economics of the project.
These (private) deed restrictions and bylaws are usually recorded separately and are only referenced in the original grant deeds.
3. Encroachment
Encroachment is the wrongful, unauthorized placement of improvements or permanent fixtures on property by an non-owner of the property. If someone encroaches on your land, they are limiting you the use of your property. When this violation is recognized the owner has up to three years to act to correct the encroachment.
Items that generally fall under encroachments often are fences, walls or building that extend over recognized boundary lines.
Basic source for information: Real Estate Principles by Walt Huber
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Measurements Used In Real Estate.
June 21st, 2008 Categories: Real Estate 101
Math and the associated discussion of measurements may become a problem for people only because they are not exposed, nor need this information in their day to day lives.
Listed below are the terms, measurements and conversion factors which a person can use when discussing or trying to figure out some real estate math.
Linear measures:
- 12 inches = 1 foot
- 1 yard = 3 feet
- 1 mile = 5,280 ft = 1,760 yards
Square
- 1 sq. ft. = 144 sq. inches
- 1 acre = 43,560 sq. ft. = 4,840 sq. yds.
- 1 sq. yd. = 9 sq. ft.
Cubic
- 1 cu. ft. = 1,728 cu. in.
- 1 cu. yd. = 27 cu. ft.
- 1 broad foot = 144 cu. in. (1 foot x 1 ft. 1 inch = 144 cu. in.)
Other
- 1 township contains 36 sections or 36 square miles or is 6 miles on a side or has 24 miles on its perimeter. (Perimeter is the distance measured around the outside of a geometric shape such as a square or rectangle).
- Setback is the distance between the street and the front of the building (home) that must exist to comply with local ordinances.
- Side yard setback is the distance between the property ine and the edge of the building that must exist to comply with local ordinances.
- Front footage is the width of a lot fronting on the designated street, and is used as a means to value lots.
- Contiguous are lots that adjoin, touch, or abut to each other which includes adjacent lots (touching at the corners).
Conversion factors:
- To convert feet to inches, multiply the number of feet by 12 (ex. 1 ft x 12 in. = 12 in)
- To convert inches to feet, divide the number of inches by 12.
- To convert yards to feet, multiply the number of yards by 3.
- To convert feet to yards, divide the number of yards by 3.
- To convert square feet to square feet, divide the number of square inches by 144.
- To convert square yards to square feet, multiply the number of square yards by 9.
- To convert square feet to square yards, divide the number of square feet by 9.
Time
- Annual = once per year.
- Bimonthly = every two months (6 times per year)
- Biennial = every two years
- 1 year = 12 months
- 1 month = (generally) 30 days but mortgages are based on actual days.
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