Civil Rights Law
Civil rights acts passed by the U.S. Congress includes those of 1866, 1870, 1871, 1875, 1964, and 1968. The first two acts gave blacks the rights to be treated as citizens in legal actions, particularly to sue and be sued and to own property. The cornerstone of the modern civil rights movement is the Civil Rights Act of 1964. This act prohibited discrimination in employment and established the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. This major piece of legislation also banned discrimination in public accommodations connected with interstate commerce, including restraints, theaters, and hotels. The Civil Rights Act of 1968 extended these guarantees to housing and real estate.
Popular Real Estate Terms
income statement destroyed by a casualty such as a fire. This requires the reconstruction of the income statement based on source records, information, and documents. Income statement ...
Marketable title that is free of encumbrances and disputed interests. Clear title is essential in order to convey a general warranty deed in a transaction. ...
Process of simultaneously appraising several pieces of property. Normally, occurs when a local government conducts a reassessment. ...
Lienholder's statement as to the unpaid balance on a trust deed note. ...
Written document by an official granting agency and signed by an empowered official certifying that some specific act including the fulfillment of certain requirements has occurred on a ...
Opinion of a judge having no direct legal or binding effect on the outcome of a pending judicial decision. An obiter dictum is considered to be an incidental judicial remark about some ...
Loan in which two or more lenders participate in the total financing of a single mortgage. The lenders in a piggyback loan do not necessarily have equal shares. ...
Judicial order prohibiting a person or business from doing something. The court may issue this dictate when unlawful conduct or activity is occurring. ...
See annuity due. ...

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