Chapter 6 - Property Ownership and Title Transfer Flashcards

1
Q

What is land?

A

The surface of the earth, extending upward to infinity and downward to the center of the earth

It includes the soil and minerals below the surface (subsurface) and the air above the earth’s surface (airspace)

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2
Q

What is RE?

A

The land plus all improvements, which are man-made artificial things attached to the land

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3
Q

What is real property

A

The physical land, natural features, man-made improvements to the land, and, the bundle or rights of ownership of real property

Includes both land and RE and is definted as all the rights, benefits, and interests that are associated with ownership of RE

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4
Q

What are the rights of real property ownership and what is title synonymous with?

A
  • Possession - possess and occupy
  • Control -use it for any legal way
  • Enjoyment - use in any legal way
  • Exclusion
  • Disposition - right to sell, will, transfer, or dispose of property

The word title is synonymous with ownership of real property

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5
Q

What are subsurface rights?

A

Rights to natural resources that exist below the surface of the earth. Can be sold or conveyed separately from land and conveyance can split among several buyers

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6
Q

What are air rights?

A

Rights above land and other objects, significant part of land and may have great value

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7
Q

Who regulates water rights?

A

Usuallythe states do and the sale of rights is a complex legal process

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8
Q

What are riparian rights?

A

Common-law rights granted to owners along the course of a river or stream. Give unrestricted access to use of water as long as flow is not altered or water contaminated

On small streams (not navigable), owner owns land under water out to center of stream

On large (navigable) streams or rivers, owner owns only out to edge of water

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9
Q

What are littoral rights?

A

Owners whose land borders large (commerically navigable) lakes, seas, and ocean. Only have claim to high watermark

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10
Q

What is accretion?

A

Process whereby property size increases due to action where water has added to the land (Ex. - water level dropping)

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11
Q

What is erosion?

A

Process whereby wind, rain, or flowing water has removed land through process of erosion and replaced it with water. Missing land no longer belongs to the owner (Ex. - cliffside land falling into ocean)

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12
Q

What is avulsion?

A

Sudden removal of soil by act of nature that causes property to become much smaller very quickly

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13
Q

What is personal property?

A

All property that can be owned by an owner but does not fit into the definition of real property. Difference between personal property and real property is that personal can be moved

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14
Q

Are manufactured homes real or personal property?

A

In most states are considered personal property, since they can be moved. If they are permanently affixed to the land though, they can be considered real property

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15
Q

Are trees and crops real or personal property?

A

Trees, rocks, bushes, and other landscape that doesn’t require cultivation on an annual basis are considered real property. Fruit, vegetables, grains, and other cultivated crops are known as “emblements” or “fructur industriales” and are considered personal property

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16
Q

What are fixtures?

A

Items of personal property that have been permanently attached to land or a building, so that they become part of the real property

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17
Q

How does one determine if property is a fixture or not when property is transferred?

A

If a property is controversial as to it being real or personal, a test of intent can be used to determine type

1) Method of annexation - how permanent is the attachment? Can it be easily removed or will it cause damage to building?
2) Adaptation to RE - cabinetry, with panels matching other cabinets would be considered a fixture; whereas a fridge, would be personal property
3) Have parties agreed to the status in offer to purchase?

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18
Q

What is accession?

A

The process by which if personal property of seller becomes property of buyer if it is not removed from real property upon seller vacating

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19
Q

How are trade fixtures in commercial RE treated upon transfer?

A

Treated as property of tenant and should be removed by the final day of occupancy

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20
Q

What are the characteristics of land (3)?

A
  • Immobility
  • Indestructibility
  • Uniqueness - no two parcels are the exact same (non-homogenous/non-homogeniety)
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21
Q

What are the economic characteristics of land (4)?

A
  • Area preference - location is important
  • Scarcity - finite source
  • Improvements - construction can dramatically raise value of land
  • Permanence of investment - buildings represent a large investment of capital and labor
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22
Q

What are vague references for legal descriptions?

A

Street addresses and assessor’s parcel numbers (APNs). They give general info about location of property

They are generally acceptable in documents which will not be recorded. Are “adequate descriptions” for listing agreements, leases, and purchase agreements

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23
Q

What are legal descriptions and the 3 types?

A

One that describes a parcel of property so well that it cannot be confused with another:

  • Metes and bounds
  • References to the US Gov Rectangular Survey
  • Lot, block, and subdivision (according to approved plat map)
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24
Q

What are metes and bounds and how do they work?

A

Metes (distance and direction) and bounds (landmarks or boundary edges) are used to define borders of parcel of land

Descriptions uses a point of beginning (POB) and then directions and linear measurements to definte the boarders and finally return to the POB

When using bounds, they use monuments like fixed, permanent, natural objects, etc.

Descriptions reference latitude and longitute, and use degrees (360 in circle), minutes (60 in a degree), and seconds (60 in a minute)

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25
Q

What is the US Gov Rectangular Survey System?

A

References principal meridians (vertical lines) and base lines (horizontal lines) that create ranges (vertical 6 mile columns) and tiers (horizontal 6 mile rose)

The intersections of ranges and tiers create townships (6mi x 6mi blocks) that are broken into 36 (1mi x 1mi) sections

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26
Q

How many acres does a township have?

A

640 acres

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27
Q

How many square feet are in an acre?

A

43,560

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28
Q

How are sections labelled and parcel broken out?

A

Labeled 1-36 starting at NE corner, moving to the W, and snaking down to end at the SE corner. The 16th section is the school section (in middle) where a school can be built

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29
Q

What is lot, block, and subdivision?

A

Usually used in metropolitan areas where blocks and lots are assigned numbers and letters. Resultant drawing is a plat map or subdivision map. Once approved by local municipality, subdivision is duly recorded and becomes part of legal description of each property

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30
Q

What does the plat map do?

A

Show location, size and shape of building lots, roads, sidewalks, street lights, curbs and gutters, utility easements, drainage easements, etc.

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31
Q

What is an encumbrance and what are some types of monetary or non-monetary encumbrances?

A

A burden upon the title to the property, even though great benefits may be derived by the owner as a results of the encumbrance

A monetary encumbrance is referred to as a lien

Non-monetary encumbrances include restrictions, easements, licenses, and encroachments

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32
Q

What is a property tax lien?

A

State and local govenment property taxes owed for things like fire and police protection, schools, streets, sewers, etc.

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33
Q

What is a mechanic’s lien?

A

State law to protect persons who provide labor or materials to improve another property. Lien is effective the date of first work or delivery of materials, not when it’s filed with public records

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34
Q

What is a general lien?

A

Once a person sues another in court and obtains final judgement, in order to collect on the judgement, must file it in the public records. The lien is against all property the judgement debtor owns in jurisdiction

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35
Q

What is lis pendens?

A

If law suit is in process, owner is trying to sell home, and aggrieved party cannot file a lien, they may consider a lis pendens (lien pending). This gives notice that litigation is pending and tends to prevent the property from being sold before the dispute is resolved

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36
Q

What is a writ of attachment?

A

If the plantiff in a suit believes the defendent is disposing of assets to avoid judgement, plantiff may seek writ of attachment from court. This prevents the transfer of assets until the lawsuit is concluded

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37
Q

What is a writ of execution?

A

Assits in collection of judgment against defendant. The sheriff seizes the property of the defendent, sells it, and applies it against the judgement

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38
Q

What are deed restrictions?

A

Restrictions that an owner of property may put on future usage of property

If owner wants to ensure property is used in a certain way, then it would be an “affirmative deed restriction” and the opposite would be a “limiting deed restriction”

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39
Q

What are conditions, covenants, and restrictions (CC&Rs)?

A

When a developer of a restricted community, like a gated community, places restrictions on the property, including the creation of a Common Interest Community (CIC); the restrictions bind all future owners

Private Police Powers - the HOA is the “government” in enforcing community rules

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40
Q

What is an easement?

A

The right for someone other than the owner to use part of a property for a specific purpose. Usually recorded with legal description, noted on a plat map, or part of the property records

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41
Q

What is an easement by necessity?

A

Right to access property by use of “public way”. A dedicated public street or highway would be a public way

A person can create an easement by necessity if their purchased property does not have ingress (entrance) or egress (exit) to the public way

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42
Q

What is an easement appurtenant?

A

All owners of a neighboring property may decided to create an easement to allow one owner to cross over the land of another. Not out of necessity

Needs to be in writing and in a form that would be accepted in public records

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43
Q

What is a servient tenement and dominant tenement?

A

Servient is the land which is given up for an appurtenant and dominant is the land that enjoys the right to pass over the easement

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44
Q

What is easement in gross?

A

Does not have a dominant tenement, only a servient tenement. Most common example would be a utility easement

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45
Q

How are easements generally created or terminated?

A

Created by:

  • granting in a deed
  • reserving in a deed
  • showing a landlocked condition
  • taking an easement by public entity by condemnation
  • continued long-term, conspicuous, and hostil use resulting in an easement by prescription

Terminated by:

  • abandonment
  • release by easement holder (quit claim deed)
  • excessive use
  • merger
46
Q

What is license (in terms of property access)?

A

Giving permission by landowner to allow another to come on land for specific purpose. It’s a priviledge and revocable

47
Q

What is property access in terms of profits?

A

Giving permission to allow another to come onto the land for the limited purpose of removing crops, timber, soil, etc. Person receiving access profits

48
Q

What is an encroachment?

A

When a thing extends over the property line of another’s property without permission by the owner

49
Q

What are the methods to remedy encroachments?

A
  • negotiations and agreements (most desireable)
  • removal (by agreement or court order)
  • suit for damages by the property owner being encroached
  • utilization - allows encroached party to have benefit and use of thing encroaching
  • suit for easement by prescription - if there for a length of time required by state statute, has been visible and continuous may claim under “adverse possession” ownership of land being encroached on
50
Q

What is a natural person (in terms of ownership)?

A

A human

51
Q

What is a non-natural person (in terms of ownership)?

A

A corporation, LLC, partnership, or limited partnership

52
Q

What is a unity of title (in terms of ownership)?

A

Condition of ownership which is common to all who hold title to property. More unities there are, more owners have in common (their ownerships) with each other

53
Q

What is an undivided interest (in terms of ownership)?

A

Where ther is more than one owner to a property, they hold undivided interests meaning no owner can claim a specific physical portion of the property as belonging to that owner only

54
Q

What is a partition (in terms of ownership)?

A

To divide out an interest where there are multiple owners. Can be physical or judicial (property is sold and proceeds distributed based on percentages of ownership)

55
Q

What is tenant in severalty?

A

One owner and property has been “severed” from all others

56
Q

What are tenants in common?

A

Two or more owner that have “one unity of title”. Have undivided interests and can, therefore, access any part of the property. They may:

  • own unequal shares (as long as total 100%)
  • acquire interests at different times
  • acquire interest in different docs
  • sell or mortgage interest without offering to, or gaining permission from, other tenants in common
  • nature or non-natural
  • have interests that are inheritable
  • have interests that may be partitioned (physical or judicial)
57
Q

What is joint tenancy and the four unities of titles?

A

Two or more natural owners that have 4 unities of title. Unities are (PITT):

1) Equal right of access and Possession
2) Equal Interests
3) Acquired title at same Time
4) Acquired Title in same document

JT’s may:

  • mortgage individual interest without gaining permission
  • sell an interest without gaining permission. Action would destroy JT status (different times)
  • seek physical or judicial partition
58
Q

What is the right of survivorship (in Joint Tenancy)?

A

Upon death of a tenant, share of deceased JT is divided equally among all the surviving JTs. Sometimes referred to as poor man’s probate

59
Q

What is tenancy by the entireties?

A

Has the four unities of title found in JT, with additional requirement that parties must be married. Cannot be partitioned, except in case of divorce, which then is divided according to agreement of parties, or court order

Unsecured creditors may not lien property held in tenancy by the entireties unless unsecured debt was a joint debt of married couple

60
Q

What is community property statuses?

A

Form of ownership requiring existence of state statute permitting it. Creates property statute where married couple may have property which solely belongs to wife, husband, or held by them as community property

61
Q

What is separate property?

A

Property owned by an individual prior to marriage or acquired after the marriage by gift or by inheritance

62
Q

What is community property?

A

All other property acquired by either husband or wife during marriage and each spouse is presumed to own a 50% interest in community property

Differs from tenancy in entireties because there is no right of survivorship. Upon death, property would pass to estate or to heirs of deceased, not automatically to deceased party’s spouse

63
Q

What are trust arrangements? Who are the trustor, trustee, and beneficiary?

A

A trust is a device where one person transfers real property to another for the benefit of a thirs, with understanding the RE asset will be used to care for trustor

Trustor - one who transfers property
Trustee - receives property
Beneficiary - one who derives benefit

64
Q

What is a living and a testamentary trust?

A

Living - established by property owners to provide for own financial care or family. Established while property owner is still alive

Testamentary - organized upon the principal’s death

65
Q

What is a land trust?

A

Land is the only asset. Different than living or testamentary in several ways:

  • land is only asset
  • trust runs for a specific time
  • public records do not name beneficiaries
  • can be used for assembling “packages” of parcels
  • beneficial interest can be transferred from one beneficiary to another
  • trustee is usually the trustor
66
Q

Explain how a corporation that owns property works

A

Stockholders do not own property, but own a derivative interest in the equity of the corporation, some of which might be real property

Require legal formation

May hold property in serveralty, tenant in common with others (human or non-human or partnership)

May not hold property as joint tenant (not human) or tenants by entireties (cannot marry) or as community property (cannot marry)

67
Q

What are general partnerships?

A

Partner ownership not needing legal formation. Creditor can seek collection of obligation by suing any or all partners. Partners can create obligations for partnership without approval of other partners

Death of a partner typically causes partnership to dissolve or if partnership continues to be formed without deceased partner included

68
Q

What is a limited partnership like?

A

Two classes: general partner and limited partner:

General partner has right to full participation in activities and are liable for obligations and debts of partnership. If GP dies, the partnership must be reformed

Limited partners have no right to participate in activities and are not liable beyond initial investment. If limited partner dies, interest is passed on to estate

69
Q

What are cooperative apartments?

A

Usually in major cities on eastern seaboard, where units were sold rather than rented. A corporation that owns the building and sells shares of stock, each share entitling the owner to a proprietary lease

Stockholder must contribute proportional share of operating expenses and had cooperative association had approval rights on sale of a share (unit)

70
Q

How is condominium ownership set up?

A

Owner owns RE rather than a share of stock. Land on which condo sits, parking, club house, swimming pool, etc. are owned by all condo owners as tenants in common

Has monthly assessment against units for expenses of the common area like property taxes, insurance, maintenance, and management of condo (condo fees)

Crated by developer and recorded as master deed - sets out ownership interests, bylaws, and CC&Rs

71
Q

What is a mixed use project?

A

Mixed use development will be designed around different but compatible users, like residential, retail, restaurant, office, and medical/dental facilities

Ownerships arrangement different from project to project but are similar to condos

72
Q

How are timeshare projects evidenced?

A

Evidenced by a deed (deeded timeshare) or based upon a lease

Conveys an undivided interest in the common area

73
Q

What is a freehold estate?

A

Ownership estate estate that bundles rights of ownership for an indeterminable period of time, based on lifetime or forever. Can be fee simple or life estates

Can also be classified as life estates, based upon life of the owner or some other designated person. Life estates are not inheritibale, so its necessary to pre-determine to whom the title shall pass upon the passing the named party

74
Q

What is a fee simple (absolute) and defeasible fee estate?

A

A fee simple absolute or fee simple defeasible:

Fee simple estate - highest quality interest where holder has all rights recognized by law. Estate runs forever and upon death of owner, is inheritable to heirs. Ideal form of ownership

Defeasible fee (fee simple defeasible) - has an attached stipulation such as “for as long as” or “during” and provided condition is not broken, the holder remains in title. After event, title reverts back to the former grantor. Becuase title can revert back. the grantor is said to have a reversionary interest. It is inheritable

75
Q

Who is the life tenant?

A

The owner of a life estate (not to be confused w/ a tenant) who can sell the property, mortgage, lease, etc. as would any owner with the exception that things change upon death

76
Q

What is an ordinary life estate?

A

Title to property will pass upon death of the owner. May name a “remainderman” who will take the title to the property as a fee simple estate. Or, creator may elect for property to revert to original owner as a reversionary interest

77
Q

What is pur autre view?

A

Translates to “for another’s life”, life estate, that dictates that title to the property the life tenant enjoys shall transfer to another upon death of some other named person

78
Q

What are legal life estates?

A

Created by state law. Florida “homestead” law protects a homeowner’s personal residence form certain creditors. Exemption offers virtually absolute protection w/ no limite from forced sale to meet demands of creditors, except under special circumstances

Residence is not protected from liens for nonpayment of property taxes, mortgage liens, construction liens, or mechanic’s liens

79
Q

What is an elective share?

A

Protects surviving spouse in the event the deceased spouse left the surviving spouse out of the will. Law provides the surviving spouse with 30% of decendent’s net estate consisting of both real and personal property, a homesteaded property if any, and property owned as tenants by the entireties

80
Q

What is a deed?

A

The only instrument used for converyance of title of land

If conveyance occurs, it is in the form of a written instrument which is “acknowledged” or witnessed by a notary public, and normally recorded in the public records in the county in which the land is located

81
Q

What are the 3 concepts common to all deeds?

A

1) Recordation - recorded in county in which the land is located
2) Two parties - the grantor (making the conveyance) and grantee (one to whom conveyance is made)
3) Warranties and convenants - promises by the grantor to the grantee concerning the title to the property, that some condition exists (or doesn’t) and will continue to exists (or not exists)

82
Q

What are the 5 general warranties of a deed?

A

1) Seisin - grantor owns property and has right and power to convey
2) Against undisclosed encumbrances - grantor has disclosed to the grantee all encumbrances
3) Quiet enjoyment - enjoy ownerships without hearing anyone make a valid claim of superior title or right
4) Further assurances - should a claim of superior title be made, grantor will defend against claim and defeat it
5) Title forever - should a party establish superior claim, the grantor will pay back to the grantee purchase price

83
Q

What is a special warranty deed?

A

Against undisclosed encumbrances - if any encumbrances, grantor has disclosed but doesn’t make assurances for when property was not owned by him

84
Q

What is a quit claim deed?

A

No warranties at all - grantor is quitting any claim the grantor may have to the property, but doens’t assert that ther is no claim at all. Used to remove liens and encumbrances from title and surrend claims, or clear clouds on the title

85
Q

What is a bargain and sale deed?

A

Implied warranty of seisin - found that only owners of property would normally enter into negotiations about a property and then agree to sell it. No written warranties and is only an implication that the grantor has title and the legal right to convey it

86
Q

What are the requirements for a valid deed?

A

1) in writing
2) valid grantor - natural person, a live, lawful age, etc.
3) indentifiable grantee
4) consideration clause
a. ) actual - purchase price
b. ) nominal - $1.00 and other consideration
c. ) good - for love and affection
d) legal - for value received
5) granting clause - must be clause which states nature and extent of interest conveyed
6) vesting clause
7) habendum clause - “to have and to hold from this day forward”
8) valid legal description - using 3 legal options
9) exceptions and reservations
a) subject to exception/encumbrances
b) restrictions or easments
10) grantor’s signature
11) attestation - deed in the notary public’s attestation that the signing parties appeared, swore, authorized, and signed
12) acknowledgement - witnessing by witnesses of granto signing the deed
13) delivery and acceptance - must be:
a) intended by the grantor
b) commenced during the lifetime of the grantor

87
Q

What is the purpose of title insurance?

A
  • assure grantee that the status of the title is as grantor warrants
  • provide financial assurance that title will be defended if necessary by title insurance company
  • pay grantee the purchase price should title be defeated
88
Q

What does a title company do?

A

Prior to issuing policy, runs a title search and thorough investigation into public records to examine history of property. A “chain of title” is made ot make sure company can link owernship

If there is a gap in title, it may be necessary to perfect title through “suit to quiet title” which will involve the use of a quit claim deed. Grantor is quitting any claim that grantor may have to the property, and does not even claim ot have any ownership or right to convey at all

89
Q

What happens if there is a break in title ownership and quit claim deed is filed?

A

Title company will prepare an “abstract of title” summarizing everything found in public records, including encumbrances and liens. Attorney may provide an opinion of title after reviewing abstract and rendering an opinion as to whether the title is marketable (good)

If title company feels it’s marketable, it will be issuing title insurance. The types of title insurance policies are CLTA and ALTA.

90
Q

What is the California Land Title Association (CLTA)?

A

Covers up to the amount of purchase price against:

1) forgery of deed
2) declaration of marital status which is incorrect
3) lack of mental capacity of grantor
4) improper delivery - made by mistake or under circumstance of fraud or not during lifetime of grantor

Exclusions are:

1) specific exceptions
2) unrecorded defects in title
3) matters which would be discovered through a survey -title insurance company will not go out to inspect the property for encroachments or size
4) rights of persons in possession

91
Q

What is the American Land Title Association (ALTA)?

A

More stringent than CLTA to protect lender. Purchase by buyer for lender and extends beyond CLTA coverage. Is a stacking coverage, so it is on tope of CLTA

Covers:

1) survey issues
2) matters which would be discovered upon inspection
3) unrecorded defects in title

92
Q

How what is an intestate person and how does property transfer?

A

An intestate person is one who has died without a will. The state has laws to ensure real and personal property is transfered to heir’s according to the state’s statute of descent and distribution

93
Q

How does a transfer of title by will occur?

A

The testator (maker of will) can five away 3 classes of assets:

  • real property - a devise given to devisee
  • personal property - a bequest
  • money - a legacy

Will must be filed with court and probated to pass

94
Q

What is probate?

A

The formal process of making sure that will is valid and making an accounting of the assets of the deceased

95
Q

What are laws related to dower and curtesy?

A

Dower being a wife’s legal interest upon husband’s death to property her husband has or acquired during marriage

Curtesy is similar to dower but dealing with wife’s property

Rights protect surviving spouse and a will cannot supercede these laws

96
Q

What are the legal requirements for making a will?

A
  • follow state law
  • testor must have legal capacity
  • will must be signed and usually witnessed by two additional people, not named in the will, who will sign the doc
  • a testor may alter a will at any time - done with a doc called a “codicil”
  • primary heirs of a decendent are spouse and close blood relatives
97
Q

What does probate do and what is the probate process?

A

Probate:

1) confirm a particular will is valid
2) add up accounts of all decendent’s assets
3) identify people who will receive assets

Process is:

1) person in possession of will, normally executor, presents to court, which files it
2) anyone in possession of 2nd or 3rd will, presents to the court as well and court upholds one of the wills
3) court distributes the assets, including real property

98
Q

Who normally performs escrow function and what are escrow instructions?

A

Most of the time, is the title insurance company or agency

Escrow instructions (or contract) is between seller, buyer, and escrow agent and is an agreement to colect all needed itemds (money, docs, etc.)

99
Q

What is the escrow process?

A
  • escrow company begins when recieve complete purchase contract and good faith funds (earnest money). at this point “escrow has been opened”
  • escrow company conducts a title search to determine ownership and status of subject property. at end, title company issues a commitment to provide policy of title insurance on property
  • escrow agent requests payoffs for all financial items that are encumbering title
  • escrowee works with buyer’s lenders to understand and monirot progress of loan application and underwriting
  • based on close of escrow date, escrowee prorates all taxes, HOA charges, interest, etc. and divides between buyer and seller
  • escrowee prepares settlement statement, typically referred to as HUD-1
  • escrowee will set up separate appointments just before closing of escrow for buyer (loan docs) and seller (deed, disclosures, etc.) to sign docs required to transfer title
  • escrow agent collects buyer’s funds, usually through wire transfer to escro agent’s bank
  • escrow agent records documents with county recorder to transfer property. Agent disburses funds to seler, seller’s lender (if applicable), HOAs, taxing authorities, brokers, etc.
  • escrow agent distributes final docs to seller’s broker, seller, buyer’s broker, buyer, etc. closing has happened
100
Q

Closing costs handled and treated differently by escrow companies across the country based on:

A
  • local laws and customs
  • foreclosures
  • short sales
  • VA loans
  • agreements of the parties
101
Q

What is the foreclosure process designed to do?

A

Protect the rights of all parties, bring them to conclusion, and pass title to the holder of the mortgage or third party, usually trustee, who arranges for property to be sold at auction, free of all encumbrances

102
Q

What is a short sale?

A

AKA pre-foreclosure where a mortgaged or secured property is sold for less than is owned to the lender. Lenders agree to short sales when there is little hope that the borrower can make adequate payments on the mortgage loan

103
Q

What is the short sale process?

A
  • lender approves the buyer
  • lender approves contract terms
  • lender approves sale amount and usually demands sale price higher than cited in contract
  • lender demands a certain net amount from sale
  • close of escrow date must be met
  • seller vacates home
  • seller cannot walk away with proceeds
104
Q

How are foreclosures or short sales treated for tax purposes?

A

As a forgiveness or income. Amount of forgiven debt should be accounted in tax returns for appropriate years

Either short or long-term capital gain

105
Q

What is a capital improvement?

A

A significant improvement to investment property which adds value and is durable in nature and will or is expected to last several years

106
Q

What is adjusted basis?

A

Original purchase price plus any capital improvements, less depreciation taken

107
Q

What happens for payment of loan on taxes?

A

Interest portion is tax deductible, but not principal portion

108
Q

How are taxes treated for sale of personal residence?

A

If you have owned and occupied a property for two out of the last fives years as a personal residence and sell it and realize a capital game, you may be exempt from the gain based on filing status

If you are single and filing as unmarried, you will be exempt from first $250k. If married and either have owned 2 of past 5 years, and are filing jointly, $500k will be exempt

Note a personal residence cannot be depreciated

109
Q

What is Foreign Investor in Real Property Tax Act (FIRPTA)?

A

At close of escrow, 10% of the gross sale price will be withheld and transmitted to the IRS (there is exclusion for residential property less than $300k in sales price)

110
Q

What is tax deferred exchanges under section 1031 of the IRS code?

A

To encourage investment in RE, investors are permitted to exchange or trade their property for other US investment property and may be able to do so without having a taxable event. The general rules:

  • must be US property
  • must be like kind property
  • must trade equal or up in vlaue
  • must trade equal or up in debt on property