|
Easement |
A property interest which one person has in land owned by another
entitling the holder of the interest to limited use or enjoyment of
the other's land. |
|
Easement In Gross |
The limited right of one person to use another's land (servient
estate), which right is not created for the benefit of any land
owned by the owner of the easement; that is, there is no dominant
estate, as the easement attaches personally to the owner, not to the
land. |
|
Emblements |
Growing crops (called "fructus industriales"), such as rice and
taro, which are produced annually through labor and
industry. |
|
Eminent Domain |
The right of government, both state and federal,
to take private property for a necessary public use, with just
compensation paid to the owner. |
|
Encroachment |
An unauthorized invasion or intrusion of a
fixture or other real property wholly or partly upon another's
property, thus reducing the size and value of the invaded
property. |
|
Encumbrance |
An unauthorized invasion or intrusion of a
fixture or other real property wholly or partly upon another's
property, thus reducing the size and value of the invaded
property. |
|
Entirety, Tenancy By |
A form of joint ownership of property between
husband and wife with the right of survivorship. |
|
Environmental Impact Statement |
A report which includes a detailed description
of a proposed development project with emphasis on the existing
environment setting, viewed from both a local and regional
perspective, and a discussion of the probable impact of the project
on the environment during all phases. |
|
Equity |
That interest or value remaining in property
after payment of all liens or other charges on the property. A
owner's equity is normally the monetary interest over and above the
mortgage indebtedness. |
|
Errors And Omissions Insurance |
A form of insurance which covers liabilities for
errors, mistakes and negligence in the usual listing and selling
activities of a real estate office or escrow company. |
|
Escheat |
The reversion of property to the state when a
decedent dies intestate and there are no heirs capable of
inheriting, or when the property is abandoned. |
|
Escrow |
The process by which money and/or documents are
held by a disinterested third person (a "stakeholder") until the
satisfaction of the terms and conditions of the escrow instructions
(as prepared by the parties to the escrow). |
|
Estoppel |
A legal doctrine by which a person is prevented
from asserting rights or facts which are inconsistent with a
previous position or representation he had made by his act, conduct
or silence. |
|
Ethics |
A system of moral principles, rules and
standards of conduct. |
|
Eviction |
legal process of removing a tenant from
possession of the premises for some breach of the lease
contract. |
|
Exchange |
A transaction in which all or part of the
consideration for the purchase of real property is the transfer of
property of a like kind. |
|
Exclusive Agency |
A written listing agreement giving one agent the
right to sell property for a specified time, but reserving to the
owner the right to sell the property himself without payment of any
commission. |
|
Exclusive Listing |
A written listing of real property in which the
seller agrees to appoint only one broker to sell the property for a
specified period of time. The two types of exclusive listings are
the exclusive agency and the exclusive right to sell. |
|
Executive |
The act of making a document legally valid, such
as formalizing a contract by signing, or acknowledging and
delivering a deed.
|
|
Executor |
A person appointed by a testator to carry out
the directions and requests in the last will and testament, and to
dispose of property according to the provisions of the will. |
|
Executory Contract |
A contract in which one or both of the parties
has not yet performed. |
|
Extender Clause |
A "carry over" clause (referred to as a safety
clause) contained in a listing which provides that a broker is still
entitled to a commission for a set of period of time after the
listing has expired if the property is sold to a former prospect of
the broker. |
|
Extension |
An agreement to continue the period of
performance beyond the specified period.
|
|
Easement |
A property interest which one person
has in land owned by another entitling the holder of the interest to
limited use or enjoyment of the other's land.
|
|
Easement In Gross |
The limited right of one person to use another's
land (servient estate), which right is not created for the benefit
of any land owned by the owner of the easement; that is, there is no
dominant estate, as the easement attaches personally to the owner,
not to the land. |
|
Emblements |
Growing crops (called "fructus
industriales"),such as rice and taro, which are produced annually
through labor and industry. |
|
Eminent Domain |
The right of government, both state and federal,
to take private property for a necessary public use, with just
compensation paid to the owner. |
|
Encroachment |
An unauthorized invasion or intrusion of a
fixture or other real property wholly or partly upon another's
property, thus reducing the size and value of the invaded
property. |
|
Encumbrance |
An unauthorized invasion or intrusion of a
fixture or other real property wholly or partly upon another's
property, thus reducing the size and value of the invaded
property. |
|
Entirety, Tenancy By |
A form of joint ownership of property between
husband and wife with the right of survivorship. |
|
Environmental Impact Statement |
A report which includes a detailed description
of a proposed development project with emphasis on the existing
environment setting, viewed from both a local and regional
perspective, and a discussion of the probable impact of the project
on the environment during all phases. |
|
Equity |
That interest or value remaining in property
after payment of all liens or other charges on the property. A
owner's equity is normally the monetary interest over and above the
mortgage indebtedness. |
|
Errors And Omissions Insurance |
A form of insurance which covers liabilities for
errors, mistakes and negligence in the usual listing and selling
activities of a real estate office or escrow company. |
|
Escheat |
The reversion of property to the state when a
decedent dies intestate and there are no heirs capable of
inheriting, or when the property is abandoned. |
|
Escrow |
The process by which money and/or documents are
held by a disinterested third person (a "stakeholder") until the
satisfaction of the terms and conditions of the escrow instructions
(as prepared by the parties to the escrow). |
|
Estoppel |
A legal doctrine by which a person is prevented
from asserting rights or facts which are inconsistent with a
previous position or representation he had made by his act, conduct
or silence. |