earnest money
deposit
A deposit made by the potential home buyer to show
that he or she is serious about buying the house.
easement
A right of way giving persons other than the owner
access to or over a property.
effective age
An appraiser’s estimate of the physical condition of
a building. The actual age of a building may be
shorter or longer than its effective age.
effective gross
income
Normal annual income including overtime that is
regular or guaranteed. The income may be from more
than one source. Salary is generally the principal
source, but other income may qualify if it is
significant and stable.
eminent domain
The right of a government to take private property
for public use upon payment of its fair market
value. Eminent domain is the basis for condemnation
proceedings.
Employer-assisted
housing
A special housing initiative that offers several
different ways for employers to work with local
lenders to develop plans to assist their employees
in purchasing homes.
encroachment
An improvement that intrudes illegally on another’s
property.
encumbrance
Anything that affects or limits the fee simple title
to a property, such as mortgages, leases, easements,
or restrictions.
endorser
A person who signs ownership interest over to
another party. Contrast with co-maker.
Equal Credit
Opportunity Act (ECOA)
A federal law that requires lenders and other
creditors to make credit equally available without
discrimination based on race, color, religion,
national origin, age, sex, marital status, or
receipt of income from public assistance programs.
equity
A homeowner's financial interest in a property.
Equity is the difference between the fair market
value of the property and the amount still owed on
its mortgage.
escrow
An item of value, money, or documents deposited with
a third party to be delivered upon the fulfillment
of a condition. For example, the deposit by a
borrower with the lender of funds to pay taxes and
insurance premiums when they become due, or the
deposit of funds or documents with an attorney or
escrow agent to be disbursed upon the closing of a
sale of real estate.
escrow account
The account in which a mortgage servicer holds the
borrower’s escrow payments prior to paying property
expenses.
escrow analysis
The periodic examination of escrow accounts to
determine if current monthly deposits will provide
sufficient funds to pay taxes, insurance, and other
bills when due.
escrow collections
Funds collected by the servicer and set aside in an
escrow account to pay the borrower’s property taxes,
mortgage insurance, and hazard insurance.
escrow disbursements
The use of escrow funds to pay real estate taxes,
hazard insurance, mortgage insurance, and other
property expenses as they become due.
escrow payment
The portion of a mortgagor’s monthly payment that is
held by the servicer to pay for taxes, hazard
insurance, mortgage insurance, lease payments, and
other items as they become due. Known as "impounds"
or "reserves" in some states.
estate
The ownership interest of an individual in real
property. The sum total of all the real property and
personal property owned by an individual at time of
death.
eviction
The lawful expulsion of an occupant from real
property.
examination of title
The report on the title of a property from the
public records or an abstract of the title.
exclusive listing
A written contract that gives a licensed real estate
agent the exclusive right to sell a property for a
specified time, but reserving the owner’s right to
sell the property alone without the payment of a
commission.
executor
A person named in a will to administer an estate.
The court will appoint an administrator if no
executor is named. "Executrix" is the feminine form. |