Indestructibility
- Characteristic of a trust that prevents the invasion of its principal by the trustees while providing a lifetime income to its principal beneficiary with the rest going to the son's children or to the daughter's children in the event the son fails to have children.
- Characteristic of a material or of a design causing it to be extremely durable even under the most extreme circumstances. For example, a bomb shelter is designed to have a high level of destructibility in order to protect its occupants under the most extreme wartime conditions.
Popular Real Estate Terms
Person receiving la legacy from a will. Normally a legatee will receive personal property possibly including real property. ...
See clapboard. ...
Fee paid only if other criteria are met. ...
Expected period that property will provide benefits. It is typically less than physical life of the property because the property continues to have physical life regardless of inefficiency ...
See estoppel. ...
Money raised by a syndicate promoter and placed into a fund prior to selecting the specific property in which funds will be invested. ...
The first thing we have to understand about the voidable contract definition is that it is not the same thing as a void contract. A voidable contract can become a void contract if a court ...
Foreign-born individual not qualifying as a citizen of the country in which he or she resides. ...
Also called an installment sales contract or contract foe feed. A type of creative financing in real estate allowing the seller to finance a buyer by allowing him or her to make a down ...

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