SEARCH LISTINGS
HOME
May 17th, 2008 



Our Honour Roll
print version
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

 

 A

Abstract : A written history of the title to a parcel of real estate as recorded in a Land Registry Office.

Affidavit: A statement or declaration reduced to writing and sworn to or affirmed before some officer who is authorized to administer an oath or affirmation, such as a notary public.

Agency: That relationship between principal and agent which arises out of a contract, either expressed or implied, written or oral, wherein an agent is employed and authorized by a principal to do certain acts on his behalf in dealing with a third party.

Agent: One who is authorized by a principal to represent him in business transactions with a third party. In the real estate profession it refers to a broker.

Appurtenance: Something which is outside the real property itself, but belongs to the land and is joined thereto. It adds to greater enjoyment of the land. A right-of-way is an appurtenance.

Assumption of Mortgage: The taking of title to property by a grantee, wherein he assumes liability for an existing mortgage against a property and becomes personally liable for the payment of such mortgage debt.

Authority: The legal power or right given by a principal and accepted by the agent to act on the principal’s behalf in performing specific acts or negotiations.


Return to Top
 B

Balance Due On Completion: The amount of money the purchaser will be required to pay to the vendor to complete the purchase, after all adjustments have been made.

Breach of Contract: Failure to fulfill an obligation under a con- tract. Breach confers a right of action on the offended party.

Building Codes: Regulations established by governments pro- viding for structural requirements for building.


Return to Top
 C

Caveat Emptor: "Let the buyer beware." The buyer must examine the goods or property he is buying and he, thereafter, buys at his own risk.

Chain of Title: The sequence of conveyances and encumbrances affecting a title to land from the time that the original patent was granted or as far back as records are available.

Charge: The name formerly given to a mortgage document when title is registered under the Land Titles Act.

Chattel: Personal property which is tangible and movable.

Closing: See "Date of Completion."

Closing Statement: A statement indicating the complete financial history of the transaction, including the amount of deposit, down payment balance due on closing, mortgage amount, etc.

Cloud on Title: Any encumbrance or claim that affects title to real property.

Commission: Remuneration paid to an agent on sale or lease of property, usually as a percentage of the amount involved.

Common Law: That part of the law formulated, developed and administered by the old common law courts, based originally on common customs and mostly unwritten.

Compensation: Payment or reward for performance of service.

Condition Precedent: One which calls for the happening of some event or performance of some act before the agreement becomes binding on the parties.

Condition Subsequent: A condition referring to a future event upon the happening of which the contract becomes no longer binding on the parties.

Condominium: The fee ownership of a specified amount of space in a multiple dwelling or other multi- occupancy building with tenancy in common ownership of portions used jointly with other owners.

Consideration: Something of value given by a promisee to a promisor to make the promise binding.

Contract: A contract is a legally binding agreement between two or more capable persons for consideration or value, to do or not to do some lawful and genuinely intended act.

Conveyance: The transfer of an interest in property from one person to another.

Covenant: An agreement contained in a deed and creating an obligation. It may be positive, stipulating the performance of some act. It may be negative or restrictive, forbidding the commission of some act.


Return to Top
 D

Damages: Compensation or indemnity for loss owing for breach of contract, or a tort (civil wrong).

Date of Completion: The date specified by the agreement of purchase and sale, when the purchaser is to deliver the balance of money due and the vendor to deliver a duly executed deed, and vacant possession of the property (unless otherwise agreed).

Deed: An instrument in writing, duly executed and delivered, that conveys title or an interest in real property.

Deed Restriction: An imposed restriction in a deed for the purpose of limiting the use of the land.

Default: Failure to fulfill an obligation.

Defendant: The party sued or required to make answer in any suit.

Deposit: Payment of money or other valuable consideration as pledge for fulfillment of contract.

D.O.R.: See Request to Redeem.

Dominant Tenement: The estate which derives benefit from an easement over a servient estate, as in a Right-of-Way.


Return to Top
 E

Easement: A right enjoyed by one landowner over the land of another.

Encroachment: A fixture, such as a wall or fence, which illegally intrudes into or invades on public or private property diminishing the size and value of the invaded property.

Encumbrance:Outstanding claim or lien recorded against property or any legal right to the use of the property by another person who is not the owner.

Equity of Redemption: The right of the mortgagor to reclaim clear title to the property upon full repayment of the debt.

Escheat: The reversion of property to the state in event the owner thereof dies leaving no will and having no legally qualified heir to whom the property may pass by lawful descent.

Estate: The degree, quantity, nature, and extent of interest which a person has in real property.

Express Authority: Authority delegated by the principal which clearly sets forth in exact, plain, direct and well-defined limits those acts and duties which the agent is empowered to perform on behalf of the principal, e.g. an exclusive listing.

Expropriation: Taking private property for public use, with fair compensation to the owner, through the exercise of the right of eminent domain.


Return to Top
 F

Foreclosure: Remedial court action taken by a mortgagee, when default occurs on a mortgage, to cause forfeiture of the equity of redemption of the mortgagor.


Return to Top
 G

Good Faith: Honesty of intention, abstention from taking unconscionable advantage of another and freedom from knowledge of circumstances which ought to cause a reasonable man to investigate.

Grant: A technical term used in deeds of conveyance to indicate a transfer of an interest or estate in land.

Grantee: The party to whom an interest in real property is conveyed (the buyer).

Grantor: The person who conveys an interest in real estate by deed (the seller).


Return to Top
 H


 I

Indenture: A document or deed, usually in duplicate, expressing certain objects between the par- ties.

Infant: A person who is a minor; under the age of eighteen and thus incapable of the indepen- dent judgment necessary to undertake a legal obligation.

Injunction: A judicial process or order requiring the per- son to whom it is directed to do or refrain from doing a particular thing.

Instrument: A form of written legal document.

Intestate: A person who dies without a will, or leaves one which is defective in form, in which case his estate descends by operation of law to his heirs or next of kin.

Irrevocable: Incapable of being recalled or revoked; un- changeable, unalterable.


Return to Top
 J

Joint Tenancy: Ownership of land by two or more persons whereby, on the death of one, the survivor or survivors take the whole estate.


Return to Top


 K


 L

Legal Description: A written description by which property can be located, definitely.

Lien: A right, given to a creditor, creating an interest in the real property until the debt is discharged.

Lis Pendens: A legal document giving notice that an action or proceeding is pending in the courts which affects the title to the designated property. This is now called "a certificate of pending litigation".

Listing: An oral or written agreement between a property owner and a broker authorizing the broker to offer the owner’s real property for sale or lease.


Return to Top
 M

Marketable Title: A title which a court of equity considers to be so free from defect that it will enforce its acceptance by a purchaser.

Matrimonial Home: Any property in which a person has an interest and that is or was at the date of separation occupied by the person and his or her spouse as their family residence. Condominiums, co-operatives, and leasehold interests can be matrimonial homes.

Meeting of the Minds: Whenever all parties agree to enter into a contract, upon specified terms.

Metes and Bounds: A system of land description whereby all boundary lines are set forth by use of terminal points and angles – mete referring to a limit or limiting mark, and bounds referring to boundary lines.

Minor: A person who is under the age of legal competence, which is eighteen years in Ontario.

More or Less: Term often found in a property description intended to cover slight, unimportant or insubstantial inaccuracies of which both par- ties are willing to assume the risk.

Mortgage: A conveyance of property to a creditor as security for payment of a debt with a right of redemption upon payment of the debt.

Mortgagee: The one to whom property is conveyed as security for the payment of a debt; the lender or creditor.

Mortgagor: The one who makes the mortgage; the borrower or debtor.


Return to Top
 N


 O

Offer and Acceptance: The basic requisites of any contract is a proposal by one party, called the offeror, to another party, called the offeree, to accept the basic terms of the agreement. If the offeree indicates his assent to the proposal, there is an acceptance and the contract will bind both parties to its terms.

Option: A right given by the owner of property to another (for valuable consideration) to buy certain property within a limited time at an agreed price.

Owner: The lawful possessor of the title to real property.


Return to Top
 P

Personal Property: All property, except land and the improvements thereon.

Power of Sale: The right of a mortgagee to force sale of the property without judicial proceedings should default occur.

Principal: The employer of an agent or broker, who gives the agent or broker the authority to do some act for him.


Return to Top
 Q

Quantum Meruit: The amount that should be paid as merited by the service performed.

Quitclaim Deed: A general release of all claims or rights to a parcel of land.


Return to Top
 R

Real Estate Broker: A person who represents a principal in a real estate trade. (See more formal definition in Sec. 1(a) of the Real Estate and Business Brokers Act.)

Request to Redeem: Notice filed in court by mortgagor under foreclosure proceedings that he requests the opportunity to redeem.

Restriction: A limitation placed upon the use of property contained in the deed or other written instrument in the chain of title.

Right: The interest one has in a piece of property.

Right of Survivorship: The distinguishing feature of joint tenancies which provides that, where land is held in undivided portions by co-owners, upon the death of any joint owner, his interest in the land will pass to the surviving co-owner, rather than to his estate.

Right-of-Way: The right to pass over another’s land, more or less frequently, according to the nature of an easement.

Riparian Rights: The rights of the owners of lands on the banks of watercourses, to take advantageous use of the water on, under, or adjacent to his land, including the right to acquire accretions, wharf slips, and fish therefrom.

Running with the Land: A covenant is said to run with the land when it extends beyond the original parties to the agreement and binds all subsequent takers to either liability to perform it or the right to take advantage of it.


Return to Top
 S

Sealed and Delivered: A term indicating that a conveyor has received adequate consideration as evidenced by his voluntary delivery. The word "sealed" adds more strength, since under old conveyancing law an official seal was used as a substitute for consideration.

Servient Tenement: An estate or land over which an easement or some other service exists in favour of the dominant tenement.

Set Back: The distance from the curb or other established line within no buildings may be erected.

Specific Performance: A remedy in a court of equity compelling a defendant to carry out the terms of an agreement or contract. It is available only where the remedy of damages cannot afford adequate relief to the plaintiff.

Statement of Adjustments: A statement prepared by the solicitor for the vendor setting out, in balance sheet form, the credits to the vendor (e.g. purchase price, prepaid taxes, prepaid insurance, etc.) and the credits to the purchaser (e.g. deposits, arrears in taxes prior to the date of closing) and the balance due on closing, so that both the purchaser and the vendor will have a record at the date of closing of the financial breakdown of the transaction.

Statute: A law established by an act of the legislature.

Statute of Frauds: A law which provides that certain contracts must be in writing in order to be inforceable at law. It includes real estate contracts.

Survey: The accurate mathematical measurement of land and buildings thereon, made with the aid of instruments.

Survivorship: The right of a person to secure ownership by reason of his outliving someone with whom he shared undivided interests in the land.


Return to Top
 T

Tenancy in Common: Ownership of land by two or more persons; unlike joint tenancy in that interest of deceased does not pass to the survivor, but is treated as an asset of the deceased’s estate.

Tenure: A system of land holdings for a temporary time period.

Time is of the Essence: Requires punctual performance of a contract on closing date and is indicated by so stating as in an Agreement of Purchase and Sale.

Title: The means of evidence by which the owner of land has lawful ownership thereof.

Torrens System: System of title recordation provided by provincial law; it is a system for the registration of land title, indicating the state of the title, including ownership and encumbrances, without the necessity of an additional search of the public records.

Transfer: To convey from one person to another.

Trust Account: An account separate and apart from one’s personal moneys, as required by law in the case of a broker.


Return to Top
 U


 V

Valid: Having force or binding force; legally sufficient and authorized by law.

Valuable Consideration: The granting of some beneficial right, interest, profit, or suffering of some detrimental forbearance, loss or default by one party in exchange for the performance of another.

Void: Of no legal effect. A nullity.

Voidable: Where one party to a contract is entitled to rescind the contract at his option.


Return to Top
 W

Waiver: An intentional relinquishment of some right or interest; the renunciation, abandonment, or surrender of some claim.

Witness: To subscribe one’s name to an agreement, will or other document for the purpose of attesting its authenticity and proving its execution by testifying, if required.


Return to Top
 X


 Y


 Z

Zoning: The division of a municipality, town or city by legislative act into districts where construction is limited to a prescribed type of building, with specific structural and architectural design and where only certain uses of the land are permitted. Zoning laws can- not be enacted arbitrarily and are only valid where they legitimately protect public health, safety, morals and general welfare.


Return to Top


admin email buying selling privacy policy contact site map