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PACKAGE MORTGAGE:
Loan that includes personal property, such as furniture in addition to the property.
PAD SITE:
Independent location for a retailer that may be near to but not part of a mall or shopping center.
PAPER PROFIT:
Description of the increase in the value of an asset that has not been realized (i.e. the asset has not been sold so that owner has not realized the profit).
PAPER:
Slang term for a loan note given instead of a cash payment.
PARCEL:
Another word for a piece of land.
PARCEL REGISTER:
Abstract index for a property registered in the Torrens System of land registration.
PAROL:
Not written, verbal.
PAROL CONTRACT:
Agreement that is made either orally or in writing and is not under seal.
PAROL EVIDENCE RULE:
Legal rule of evidence. A court will not allow evidence of oral discussions which purport to modify a written contract.
PARTIAL INTEREST:
Ownership of property that is less than 100% or on a lower level than fee simple.
PARTIAL PAYMENT:
Any payment which is insufficient to meet the full amount requirement of the agreement.
PARTIAL RELEASE:
Document signed by the mortgagees holding a blanket mortgage registered on title to several properties which removes the mortgage from title to just one of the properties.
PARTIAL TAKING:
Where a government body takes only a portion of a landowner’s land or rights to land by condemnation.
PARTIALLY AMORTIZED MORTGAGE:
Very common form of mortgage in which the term is less than the amortization period such that, at the maturity date, the mortgage is not fully paid out and either refinancing or a large balloon payment is required.
PARTICIPATION (OR PARTICIPATING) MORTGAGE:
Mortgage in which the lender is entitled to a stated share of the income of the property or of sale proceeds.
PARTITION:
Court ordered division of property owned by two or more owners, may take the form of a physical division of the property or a forced sale and division of the proceeds.
PARTNERSHIP:
Form of business enterprise where two or more persons join together without forming a corporation. The partners are capable of binding each other to contracts, are liable for each other’s actions.
PARTY WALL:
Shared wall between two pieces of property, most often in row-houses, semi-detached houses, or townhouses. The shared wall generally stands on the property line.
PASSIVE SOLAR HEATING:
Maximization of the sun’s heating abilities through careful design of a building.
PATENT:
The initial transfer of title to land from government to private ownership.
PAY OUT:
Provide the lender with the total amount then required to retire a loan obligation.
PAYMENT ADJUSTMENT INTERVAL:
Period of time between changes in the amount of each periodic payment on a variable or ARM.
PAYMENT CAP:
Term of some variable or ARMs in which the level to which the monthly payment may rise is limited to a certain dollar figure.
PAYMENT CHANGE DATE:
Date when the amount of each payment under an adjustable, variable or graduated payment mortgage changes.
PAYMENT DECREASE CAP:
Contractual limit on the amount of each periodic payment may drop at any one payment change date. Expressed as a percentage.
PAYMENT INCREASE CAP:
Contractual limit on the amount of each periodic payment may rise at any one payment change date. Expressed as a percentage.
PAYMENT PENALTY:
Also known as “prepayment penalty” or “early payment penalty”, the fee paid by a borrower when she pays out some or all of the principal of a loan at a time when such a payment is not allowed under the terms of the loan.
PRIME TENANT:
Biggest tenant in a commercial complex. Also known as “key tenant” or “anchor tenant”.
PENALTY:
Fine for breaching a rule, term of a contract or law.
PENTHOUSE:
Dwelling(s) located at the top of a tall building, often luxurious.
PER STIRPES:
Latin term, meaning by representation. A method of dividing an estate equally among the heirs of the deceased regardless of how many people are involved. If an heir has deceased, his share is divided equally by her linear descendants.
PERC TEST (PERCOLATION):
A method of determining the ability of the soil of a property to absorb liquids, used in construction projects and for septic systems. PERC is derived from the word PERCOLATE.
PERCENTAGE LEASE:
Rental agreement in which the tenant’s monthly payment is a percentage of the gross sales of the tenant’s business (although a minimum payment is usually set out in the agreement).
PERDIDO KEY:
Located on the Northwest Florida Panhandle’s Gulf Coast. Perdido Key literally translated from Spanish is “Lost Island”.
PERFORMANCE:
Meeting one’s obligations under a contract or agreement.
PERFORMANCE BOND:
Written promise from an insurance company, stating that if a given person does not complete work required under a contract, the insurer will pay someone else to complete the work or pay damages.
PERIODIC PAYMENT CAP:
See “payment cap”.
PERIODIC RATE CAP:
See “rate cap”.
PERMANENT LOAN:
Long-term mortgage, often registered after construction is complete and the property is occupied. Also known as “end loan.”
PERMIT:
Government body’s written permission to do something which is regulated by that body.
PERPETUITY:
Endlessness. Forever. Many jurisdictions have laws against tying up a title to a property in perpetuity.
PERSON:
Legal term referring to any entity which is capable of entering a contract or suing and being sued. Generally, an individual of legal age, mentally capable human being, an incorporated company, a partnership or a government body.
PERSONAL PROPERTY:
Items owned by someone which are not land.
PERSONAL RESIDENCE:
Person’s home, used to establish their place for voting, taxation and other civic issues.
PERSONALTY:
See “personal property”.
PIPELINE RISK:
Slang term describing the possibility that a lender will lose money as a result of committing to a loan at a given interest rate only to see interest rates rise in the interim before the loan transaction is closed.
PIPESTEM LOT:
See “flag pole lot”. A piece of land connected to a street by a long, narrow strip of land.
PITI RESERVES:
Amount of extra money a borrower must have to cover the cost of principal, interest and taxes on a mortgage for a set number of months.
PLAINTIFF:
Person who sues in court. The person who makes a legal claim. As opposed to “defendant”.
PLANNED UNIT DEVELOPMENT (PUD):
Housing development where a homeowner’s association administers common property owned and shared by all dwelling owners in the project. Dwellings are often clustered to allow for more common space and special zoning is required for this kind of development.
PLANNING COMMISSION:
Appointed board which conducts hearings to consider applications for minor variances of planning ordinances. Also known as “Planning Board, “Zoning Board”, etc.
PLAT BOOK:
Public record of plans, street maps, etc.
PLAT:
Detailed map which sets out lots, streets, common areas and other features of a tract of land.
PLEDGED ACCOUNT MORTGAGE (PAM):
The payment of funds into a pledged account to be used to reduce mortgage payments at a later date.
PLOT PLAN:
Survey-like diagram of a property showing current or planned improvements and uses of the land.
PLOTTAGE:
Act of acquiring a number of smaller, adjacent parcels to create one larger, more useful plot of land.
POCKET CARD:
Identification required by most state’s licensing commissions for real estate salespersons and brokers.
POINT:
Equal to 1% of the principal, a charge levied on the borrower by the lender for originating the mortgage as prepaid interest. Also known as “loan discount points”.
POOL:
- Gather into a group for greater effectiveness.
- An artificial body of water for recreational swimming.
PORCH:
Cove entrance to a building, usually projecting from the wall and having a separate roof.
PORTICO:
Porch or cove walk, consisting of a roof supported by columns, often at the entrance or across the front of a building.
POSSESSION:
State of occupying, controlling, using property to the exclusion of all others, exhibiting one’s right or title to property.
POTENTIAL GROSS INCOME:
The amount of money that a property will generate if it is fully utilized with no gaps, vacancies or other interruptions in income.
POWER OF ATTORNEY:
Document, signed by the donor in front of witnesses, authorizing another person to act on the donor’s behalf and to bind the donor to those
actions.
POWER OF SALE:
Generally the fastest and cheapest mortgage enforcement method open to lenders. A common clause in a mortgage agreement which gives the lender the right to take over and sell the property to cure the borrower’s default. The sale proceeds are allocated first to principal and interest, then to penalties, then to the lender’s costs in exercising the power, then to other registered claimants and finally to the borrower if there is any left.
PRAIRIE HOUSE:
Long low house of the early twentieth century style, with a row of windows across the front and a plain exterior.
PRE-APPROVED MORTGAGE:
Commitment from a lender to provide a loan on stated terms to a borrower before the borrower has found a property to buy. The preapproved mortgage allows the borrower to make a firm, cash offer on the property of choice.
PREARRANGED REFINANCING AGREEMENT:
An arrangement between lender and borrower in which the lender agrees to favorable terms for the borrower on a future refinance as an inducement to the borrower to place the original mortgage with the lender.
PRECLOSING:
Meeting of the parties to a transaction prior to the scheduled closing date to allow some or all of the documents to be signed and more complicated issues settled prior to closing.
PREFABRICATED:
Descriptive term for a building that is put together on site from components (walls, floors, roof, etc.) built off-site (in a factory, for example).
PRE-FORECLOSURE SALE:
The sale of a property by a delinquent borrower under an agreement with the lender. The sale may not produce enough proceeds to pay out the loan but the lender will save the costs of foreclosing and selling.
PRELEASE:
Find tenants for a property before construction is completed.
PREMISES:
Descriptive term for the land, building or parts thereof involved in a particular transaction.
PREMIUM:
- Periodic payment on a policy of insurance.
- The value of a debt instrument in excess of it face value.
- Of highest quality.
PREPAID EXPENSES:
Payments made on account of costs and disbursements that are not yet incur, may be placed in an escrow account.
PREPAID INTEREST:
Charges for interest that are paid in advance of their accrual (i.e. point charges, etc.).
PREPAYMENT:
Payment of all or part of the principal of a loan before it comes due.
PREPAYMENT CLAUSE:
Term in a mortgage that establishes the rules regarding extra payments toward principal.
PREPAYMENT PENALTY:
Fee charged to a borrower for paying out all or part of the principal of the mortgage or loan before it comes due.
PREPAYMENT PRIVILEGE:
Right of the borrower to pay out all or part of the outstanding principal before it comes due.
PRE-QUALIFICATION:
Act of going through the mortgage application process before the borrower is ready to borrow, to establish how much money the borrower could obtain under a loan.
PRESALE:
Marketing of properties under construction or simply in the planning stages.
PRESCRIPTION:
Legal term describing the acquisition of rights or obligations through the passage of time (such as adverse possession).
PRESCRIPTIVE EASEMENT:
Legally enforceable right to make use of all or part of the property of another as a result of continuous and uninterrupted use of that property for a period of time as established by statute.
PRICE-LEVEL-ADJUSTED MORTGAGE:
Adjustable or variable payment loan which uses the rate of inflation as an index.
PRIMARY LEASE:
Main lease, under which other sub-leases exist.
PRIME RATE: Lowest rate of interest on bank loans at a given time and place, offered to prefer borrowers,
usually saved for the best clients of the lenders.The interest rate banks charge to large corporations for short-term loans. May also be set by a national institution as a benchmark or index for other lenders.
The interest rate a bank charges its best or “prime” customers. Each bank will quote a prime lending rate. Many institutions quote prime rates established by large money center commercial banks. There is also a prime rate average listed in the Wall Street Journal that is an average of the largest commercial banks. The rate given to consumers on their loans is often based as the prime rate plus a certain percentage, which represents the lender’s assessment of the risk in lending, plus its profit margin.
PRINCIPAL:
- The amount of money borrowed or still owed on a loan, without including interest.
- The person on whose behalf an agent acts.
PRINCIPAL AND INTEREST PAYMENT (P&I):
A blended, periodic payment that is enough to pay off accumulated interest and a portion of the principal.
PRINCIPAL BALANCE:
Outstanding amount owing on a mortgage without including accumulated interest.
PRINCIPAL BROKER:
The head of a real estate brokerage, licensed as a broker, who is responsible for all transactions run through the firm.
PRINCIPLE OF ANTICIPATION:
The value of property is affected by the potential future benefits of its ownership. (The Income Approach relies on the Principle of Anticipation.)
PRINCIPLE OF BALANCE:
Value and production are maximized when opposing or interacting factors are in equilibrium. An imbalance will result in an over improvement or under improvement and consequentially a loss in value.
PRINCIPLE OF CHANGE:
Supply and demand fluctuate in response to changes in social, economic, and other conditions that influence value. (This is the fundamental reason for the requirement that appraisers estimate value as of a specific date.)
PRINCIPLE OF CONFORMITY:
The value of a property is enhanced when the uses of surrounding properties conform to the use of the subject property.
PRINCIPLE OF CONTRIBUTION (CONTRIBUTORY VALUE):
The value of a component, regardless of its cost, is equal to the amount of value it adds to the property as a whole as perceived by the market. (This principle is particularly useful to the Sales Comparison Approach.)
PRINCIPLE OF CONSISTENT USE:
The principle of consistent use requires both the land and the improvement to be valued for the same use, even if they are being valued separately.
PRINCIPLE OF COMPETITION:
Competition occurs when supply and demand are out of balance.
PRINCIPLE OF HIGHEST AND BEST USE:
Market value is determined by the most profitable use of the property consistent with the following criteria:
(1) Physically possible
(2) Legally permissible
(3) Financially feasible
(4) Maximally productive
PRINCIPLE OF PROGRESSION/REGRESSION:
Progression is the increase in value of a property that is attributable to its location among more desirable properties. Regression is the decline in value suffered by a properly that is located in an area of less desirable properties.
PRINCIPLE OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND:
The value of a commodity in a competitive market is determined by the relative levels of supply and demand. The demand for a commodity is created by scarcity. Prices decrease when supply exceeds demand of a commodity and increase when demand is greater than supply.
PRINCIPLE OF SUBSTITUTION:
No prudent buyer will pay more for a properly than it would cost to acquire an equivalent substitute property of equal utility. (The Cost and Sales Comparison Approaches rely on the Principle of Substitution.)
PRINCIPLE OF SURPLUS PRODUCTIVITY:
This principle recognizes the Four (4) Agents of Production:
1. Land
2. Labor
3. Capital
4. Entrepreneurship
In any enterprise, labor must be paid first. With capital paid after that under the surplus productivity concept. Entrepreneurship is then paid.
This principle forms the basics of residual techniques for estimating land value.
PRINCIPAL RESIDENCE:
Dwelling in which a person resides for the majority of the time.
PRINCIPAL, INTEREST, TAXES AND INSURANCE (PITI):
The four parts of many periodic loan payments.
PRIVATE MORTGAGE INSURANCE (PMI):
Policy of insurance issued by a non-governmental entity which protects a lender against the default of the borrower.
PROBATE OR PROVE:
Establishment of the validity of a will through a court process.
PRO-FORMA STATEMENT:
Latin meaning a statement “according to form”. Financial projections.
PROGRESS PAYMENTS:
Loan advances issued to a builder as construction of a building moves forward.
PROMISSORY NOTE:
Document signifying an indebtedness.
PROPERTY APPRECIATION:
Annualized rate of change in property value. Since Real Estate is typically a leveraged investment, small changes of just a few percent can have a dramatic impact on your rate of return. As a general rule, it is best to be conservative on your appreciation estimates since the output results will use this value to forecast years into the future. Beware that past market appreciation may not be an indbeforeication of future market appreciation, always Error on the side of caution.
PROPERTY LINE:
The recorded boundary of a plot of land.
PROPERTY:
- The rights of ownership in lands or goods.
- Land.
PROPERTY TAX:
Also known as “realty tax”, the tax levied on ownership of property.
PROPRIETARY LEASE:
Rental agreement between a cooperative housing corporation and a share holder allowing use of a certain unit in the premises.
PRORATE:
To apportion a divisible item among parties according to their share.
PROSPECT:
- Investigate land for valuable mineral deposits.
- A potential buyer.
PUBLIC AUCTION:
A public meeting at which properties are sold to pay defaulted mortgages.
PUBLIC HOUSING:
Accommodation offered by the government to low income people for nominal rents.
PUBLIC SALE:
See “public auction”.
PURCHASE AGREEMENT:
See “agreement of sale” or “agreement of purchase and sale”.
PURCHASE MONEY MORTGAGE (PMM):
A loan from the vendor to the purchaser to help finance the purchase of the property.
PURCHASER:
Person who buys a property.
PURCHASE PRICE:
Consideration paid for the purchase of a property as set out in the agreement.