Hector M. Yepis R(S) CDPE CHS SFR AHWD
Short Sales on Maui "Helping Good Families in difficult times"

Legal Terms & Definitions


Real Estate 


Land and the property permanently attached to it, such as buildings, houses, stationary mobile homes, fences and trees. In legalese, real estate is also called real property.

Short Sale (of house) 


A sale of a house in which the proceeds fall short of what the owner still owes on the mortgage.   Many lenders will agree to accept the proceeds of a short sale and forgive the rest of what is owed on the mortgage when the owner cannot make the mortgage payments. By accepting a short sale, the lender can avoid a lengthy and costly foreclosure, and the owner is able to pay off the loan for less than what he owes. See also deed in lieu (of foreclosure).

Mortgage

 
A loan in which the borrower puts up the title to real estate as security (collateral) for a loan. If the borrower doesn't pay back the debt on time, the lender can foreclose on the real estate and have it sold to pay off the loan.

Foreclosure

 The forced sale of real estate to pay off a loan on which the owner of the property has defaulted
 
Deed

A document that transfers ownership of real estate.

Deed in Lieu (of foreclosure)

 
A means of escaping an overly burdensome mortgage. If a homeowner can't make the mortgage payments and can't find a buyer for the house, many lenders will accept ownership of the property in place of the money owed on the mortgage. Even if the lender won't agree to accept the property, the homeowner can prepare a quitclaim deed that unilaterally transfers the homeowner's property rights to the lender.

 

Default


A failure to perform a legal duty. For example, a default on a mortgage or car loan happens when you fail to make the loan payments on time, fail to maintain adequate insurance or violate some other provision of the agreement. Default on a student loan occurs when you fail to repay a loan according to the terms you agreed to when you signed the promissory note, and the holder of your loan concludes that you do not intend to repay.

Quitclaim deed


A deed that transfers whatever ownership interest the transferor has in a particular property. The deed does not guarantee anything about what is being transferred, however. For example, a divorcing husband may quitclaim his interest in certain real estate to his ex-wife, officially giving up any legal interest in the property. Compare grant deed.

 

 

 

Disclaimer -- Legal Information Is Not Legal Advice

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

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