La Blanca Real Estate Other Lawyer, Texas, page 7


Includes: Commercial Leasing, Commercial Real Estate, Condominiums, Conveyancing, Housing & Urban Development, Premises Liability, Residential Real Estate, Title Insurance

Jose E. Chapa

Commercial Real Estate, International Other, Family Law, Criminal
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  56 Years

Ramon Vega

Commercial Real Estate, Wills, Family Law, Business & Trade
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  25 Years

Antonio Villeda

Estate Planning, International Tax, Bankruptcy, Immigration, Commercial Real Estate
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  42 Years

Cassandra Gonzalez

Litigation, Commercial Real Estate, Wills, Commercial Bankruptcy
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  3 Years

David Acosta

Personal Injury, Business & Trade, Commercial Real Estate, Immigration
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  19 Years

L. G. Canales

Commercial Real Estate, Real Estate
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  45 Years

Alberto Barbosa

Commercial Real Estate, Real Estate, Criminal, Personal Injury
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  19 Years

Armando Puente

Commercial Real Estate, Construction, Real Estate
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  47 Years

Robert Bradley Mcgann

Commercial Leasing, Equine, Insurance, Business
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  13 Years

Boone Channing Slusher

Commercial Real Estate, Family Law, Business & Trade, Credit & Debt
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  58 Years

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LEGAL TERMS

YELLOW-DOG CONTRACT

An employment contract in which the employer forbids the employee to join a labor union. Yellow-dog contracts are not legally enforceable.

DEVISE

An old legal term that is generally used to refer to real estate left to someone under the terms of a will, or to the act of leaving such real estate. In some s... (more...)
An old legal term that is generally used to refer to real estate left to someone under the terms of a will, or to the act of leaving such real estate. In some states, 'devise' now applies to any kind of property left by will, making it identical to the term bequest. Compare legacy.

LIMITED EQUITY HOUSING

An arrangement designed to encourage low-and moderate-income families to purchase housing, in which the housing is offered at an extremely favorable price with ... (more...)
An arrangement designed to encourage low-and moderate-income families to purchase housing, in which the housing is offered at an extremely favorable price with a low down payment. The catch is that when the owner sells, she gets none of the profit if the market value of the unit has gone up. Any profit returns to the organization that built the home, which then resells the unit at an affordable price.

NET LEASE

A commercial real estate lease in which the tenant regularly pays not only for the space (as he does with a gross lease) but for a portion of the landlord's ope... (more...)
A commercial real estate lease in which the tenant regularly pays not only for the space (as he does with a gross lease) but for a portion of the landlord's operating costs as well. When all three of the usual costs--taxes, maintenance and insurance--are passed on, the arrangement is known as a 'triple net lease.' Because these costs are variable and almost never decrease, a net lease favors the landlord. Accordingly, it may be possible for a tenant to bargain for a net lease with caps or ceilings, which limits the amount of rent the tenant must pay. For example, a net lease with caps may specify that an increase in taxes beyond a certain point (or any new taxes) will be paid by the landlord. The same kind of protection can be designed to cover increased insurance premiums and maintenance expenses.

ESTATE

Generally, all the property you own when you die.

DOMINANT TENEMENT

Property that carries a right to use a portion of a neighboring property. For example, property that benefits from a beach access trail across another property ... (more...)
Property that carries a right to use a portion of a neighboring property. For example, property that benefits from a beach access trail across another property is the dominant tenement.

WORDS OF PROCREATION

Language used to leave property to a person and his or her descendants, which typically take the form 'to A, and the heirs of his body,' where A is the person r... (more...)
Language used to leave property to a person and his or her descendants, which typically take the form 'to A, and the heirs of his body,' where A is the person receiving the property.

BREACH OF CONTRACT

A legal claim that one party failed to perform as required under a valid agreement with the other party. For example you might say, 'The roofer breached our con... (more...)
A legal claim that one party failed to perform as required under a valid agreement with the other party. For example you might say, 'The roofer breached our contract by using substandard supplies when he repaired my roof.'

EMINENT DOMAIN

The power of the federal or state government to take private property for a public purpose, even if the property owner objects. The Fifth Amendment to the Unite... (more...)
The power of the federal or state government to take private property for a public purpose, even if the property owner objects. The Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution allows the government to take private property if the taking is for a public use and the owner is 'justly compensated' (usually, paid fair market value) for his or her loss. A public use is virtually anything that is sanctioned by a federal or state legislative body, but such uses may include roads, parks, reservoirs, schools, hospitals or other public buildings. Sometimes called condemnation, taking or expropriation.

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