Liens and Easements Flashcards
Define encumbrance
right or interest in a property held by a party who is NOT the owner of the property
Identify the two categories of encumbrances
- Liens - financial claims against the property
2. usage encumbrances - restrictions, easements, encroachments
Describe how an encumbrance is different from a license.
A license is not a permanent right
a privilege to enter the land or to use something of another for a specific purpose
EXAMPLES: permission to park in a neighbor’s driveway or to erect a billboard. The permission given by a license may be withdrawn. The primary feature of a license is that the license is terminable at the will of the licensor (the issuer of the license).
Define lien
A financial claim or charge against real estate that provides security for a debt or obligation of the property owner
Describe what is meant by voluntary, involuntary, general, and specific liens
There are 2 types of liens: voluntary (owner’s voluntary actions - placing a mortgage loan) and involuntary (created by law - real estate tax lien)
Liens can be classified as: general (affects ALL the property of a debtor - real and personal) or specific (secured by a specific parcel of real estate and affect only that particular property)
Describe what is meant by voluntary, involuntary, general, and specific liens (Big Four)
The Big Four
Real Estate Tax Lien—specific, involuntary
Mechanic’s Lien—specific, involuntary
Judgment—general, involuntary
Mortgage Lien—specific, voluntary
Explain how a lien is released
paid or has otherwise been considered satisfied then the party benefiting from the lien needs to remove the lien.
achieved through recording of a document referred to as a release of lien or satisfaction of lien.
Satisfy a judgment creditor, judgments can be enforced through the sale of the debtor’s real or personal property by a sheriff - it affords the creditor with collection options on the judgment
If the sale yields enough to satisfy the debt after any liens with priority have first been satisfied, the sheriff’s report of sale will show that the sale yielded sufficient money to satisfy the debt and the record will be cleared of the judgment.
A judgment also can be satisfied by the debtor’s payment of the debt in full. Debtors who pay such a debt and fail to record a satisfaction piece—a document that states that the debt has been paid in full—are often surprised to find the judgment still on their credit records years later.
Currently in New York, a judgment lien bears statutory interest rates of 9% per annum on the monetary judgment amount.
This rate of post-judgment interest is set by the civil procedural law titled the Civil Practice Law and Rules (CPLR). CPLR Section 5004 not only fixes the post-judgment rate of interest at 9% per year, but CPLR Section 5003 further states that interest must run from the date of entry of the judgment.
Describe and identify general liens
judgments estate and inheritance taxes debts of a deceased person corporation franchise taxes federal and state income taxes
Describe and identify judgments.
court orders to pay a debt, such as an unpaid bill. They become liens against all real property owned by an individual in that county when they are docketed (filed) in the county clerk’s office.
They also may be filed in other counties in New York State and against personal property.
Judgement differs from a mortgage in that a specific parcel of real estate was never given as security for the debt.
A judgment takes priority from the date the judgment is docketed in the county clerk’s office.
A lis pendens is not itself a lien, but rather notice of a possible future lien. Recording a lis pendens notifies prospective purchasers and lenders that there is a potential claim against the property.
a general involuntary lien on all real property in the county owned by the debtor when it is docketed (filed, recorded) with the county clerk. Transcripts of the lien also may be docketed in any other county in New York against the debtor’s other real property.
A judgment is a lien against real property for ten years and can be renewed for ten more
Describe and identify specific liens, particularly real estate tax liens, mortgage liens, and mechanics’ liens.
Include mechanics’ liens, mortgages, real estate taxes, special assessments, liens for certain public utilities, vendors’ liens, vendees’ liens, and surety bail bond liens
Describe and identify real estate tax liens
specific and involuntary
NYC operates on fiscal year July 1 - June 30
real property tax liens have property over all other liens
Describe and identify mortgage liens
mortgage or collateral - voluntary lien
given to a lender by a borrower as security for the repayment of a loan. It becomes a lien on real property when
-the mortgage funds are disbursed,
-the mortgage document is signed by the borrower (mortgagor),
-the same is delivered to the mortgagee (lender), and
-the mortgage is recorded.
The lender files or records the mortgage in the office of the county clerk or register of the county where the property is located.
Mortgage lenders generally require a first mortgage lien; this means that (aside from taxes) no other liens against the property will take priority over the mortgage lien.
Second mortgages and home equity loans do not, of course, have first priority. When the debt is fully paid, the lien is removed from the property by filing a satisfaction of mortgage certificate signed by the lender.
In addition, a lien can be removed by recording a document called a “release of lien.” For this to occur, the party holding the lien (lienor) must execute the release document in favor of the liened party (lienee).
Describe and identify mechanics’ liens
specific property by workers or suppliers who have not been paid for labor or materials used in construction, improvement, or repairs of that property.
Covers a situation in which an owner has not paid for work done on the property or the general contractor has been paid but has not paid subcontractors or suppliers of materials.
A claim for a mechanic’s lien must be placed within four months of the completion of the work on a single dwelling,
while on other types of transactions, liens must be placed within eight months.
A mechanic’s lien expires in one year but may be renewed.
Court action is not required; the lien is simply recorded in the public records.
An example of a lien that falls into the eight-month filing deadline category would be a broker’s lien.
On the theory that the negotiation of a long-term lease constitutes an improvement of commercial property, a broker may enter a lien in the public records for unpaid commissions. Such a lien may be filed only
-if the property is to be used for other than residential purposes,
-if the lease is for three years or longer, and
-if the broker was working under a written commission agreement or listing agreement.
The lien must be filed within eight months of the date when the commission became due.
This includes entitlement of commissions that are paid over a short or long period of time through installments. Each installment when due gives the broker the right to file the lien on the unpaid installment within eight months from the installment’s due date.
Similarly, the RPL allows a broker to file an affidavit of entitlement to commission for negotiation of a contract for the purchase or lease of any real property.
In 2006, the New York Legislature passed the Commission Escrow Act. This bill was expected to aid
residential real estate brokers in collecting their commission on a residential sale. On August 5, 2008, the governor signed into law an amendment to Section 294-b. The amendment provides that an affidavit of entitlement filed by the broker before a closing would require the seller to deposit the broker’s commission in escrow with the county recording officer. In order for this to occur, the listing agreement would have to include a recital of language covering this provision and ultimately allowing the broker to do this. The funds would continue to remain in escrow with the county recording officer until the rights of the interested parties were determined by
-a judge,
-alternative dispute resolution, or
-settlement between the seller and the broker.
The filing would have to occur before the delivery of the deed.
The amendment became law on January 1, 2009
Describe the effects of liens on title
If the buyer agreed, an owner could sell a parcel of real estate even though it was encumbered by a lien
lien, remains with the property because liens and other encumbrances run with the land; that is, they will bind successive owners.
Liens attach to property, not to the property owner.
Subordination agreements
voluntary written agreements between lien holders to change the priority of mortgage, judgment, and other liens under certain circumstances
it is notable that all leases within income-generating properties will also contain a subordination clause
this clause places the interests of the leaseholder as secondary to that of any past, present, or future financing placed on the property or any underlying ground lease (by which the leaseholder leases land from the land owner).