Definitions are referenced from various governmental real estate sites,
IAAO
Object of Tax
(1) The objective element on which a tax
is imposed. (2) The aims or purposes for which the tax is designed. Note: This term,
as defined in (1) above, does not seem to be distinguished adequately from "measure
of tax," "subject of tax," and "tax base." Such distinction as can be drawn is pedantic,
and the use of the term in this sense is not recommended. It is also recommended
that the term "purpose of tax" be substituted for the second usage given above.
Compare measure of tax; subject of tax; tax base.
Objective
The quality of being definable by specific criteria without the need for judgment. Quantitative variables are objective.
Objective Data
Objective data are variables for which the correct value can be
verified. Examples include zoning, corner lot (yes or no), land area, and front
feet
Observation
One recording or occurrence of the value
of a variable, for example, one sale ratio among a sample of
sales ratios.
Observed Condition Breakdown Method
This divides depreciation into all its
various components-curable physical deterioration, incurable short-lived-item physical
deterioration, incurable basic structure (long-lived items) physical deterioration,
curable functional obsolescence, incurable functional obsolescence, and economic
(external) obsolescence-often for each major building component.
Obsolescence
A decrease in the value of a property
occasioned solely by shifts in demand from properties of this type to other types
of property and/or to personal services. Some of the principal causes of obsolescence
are: (1) Changes in the esthetic arts; (2) changes in the industrial arts, such
as new inventions and new processes; (3) legislative enactments; (4) change in consumer
demand for products that results in inadequacy or overadequacy; (5) migration of
markets that results in misplacement of the property. Contrast depreciation, physical;
depreciation, economic.
Occupancy
The act of taking or holding possession
of property.
Occupancy Ratio
(1) The ratio of the occupied units (for
example, square feet of floor space, living units, or rooms) of a property to the
total available units. (2) The ratio of the actual gross income from leased units
of a property to the total gross income that would be obtained if all units were
leased at standard rates.
Off-line Equipment
Computing machinery not under the direct
control of the computer's central processing unit.
Offsets
Environmental permits allow certain amounts of air pollutants to be released into the environment. If an industry wishes to
expand and increase air pollution emissions, it may first be required to reduce
its current level of emissions, so that the expanded plant will not emit more air
pollution than did the original plant. A company may also trade air pollution allowances
with another company to facilitate expansion of the first company. Both these exchanges
(intercompany and intra-company) are called "offsets."
One-Third, Two-Thirds Rule
An empirical rule that ascribes half of
the value of a lot to the front third and the other half to the rear two-thirds.
Compare 4-3-2-1 rule; Harper rule; Hoffman rule.
Open Market
A freely competitive market in which any
buyer or seller may trade and in which prices are determined by competition.
Operating Expenses
Expenses necessary to maintain the flow
of income from a property. These are deducted from effective gross income to obtain
net operating income, which is then capitalized in the income approach to obtain
an indication of market value. Such expenses generally include the costs of property
insurance; heat, water, and other utilities; repairs and maintenance; replacement
reserves for such items as heat and air-conditioning systems, water heaters, built-in
appliances, elevators, roofing, floor coverings, and other items whose economic
life will expire before that of the structure itself; management; and other miscellaneous
items necessary to operate and maintain the property. Not considered operating expenses
are depreciation charges, debt service, income taxes, capital improvements, and
personal or business expenses of the owner. In addition, for assessment purposes,
property taxes are usually treated as an adjustment to the capitalization rate rather
than as an expense item.
Operating Leased Property
Property under an operating lease not
included as an asset on the books of the lessee company.
Operating Statement
Summarizes in writing the gross income,
annual expenses, and resulting net operating income of a business during a specified
period of time.
Operating Unit
(1) The property, taken as a whole, that
is used in a public utility operation. (2) A term used to define an integrated set
of assets whose value is based on the interaction and contribution of the assets
as a whole.
Opportunity Cost
The principle that the cost of a resource
for one use is the value of the resource in its best alternative use.
Ordinance
A statute or law that designates an enactment
by a county's or municipal corporation's legislative body.
Origination Fee
A fee charged by a lender (called the
loan "originator" ) for making a real estate loan.
Orthographic Projection
A map-plotting system whereby parallel
lines project from points on the sphere to a plane tangent to the sphere at the
map center.
Orthophotograph
A photograph derived from perspective
photographs and equivalent to a photograph made by orthographic projection. In a
perfect orthophotograph, there are
no displacements of images because of tilt or
relief.
Orthophotomap
A photomap prepared from an orthophotograph
or a precisely controlled assembly of orthophotographs; generally published in standard
map format.
Outliers
Observations that have unusual values,
that is, they differ markedly from a measure of central tendency. Some outliers
occur naturally; others are due to data errors.
Outputs
(1) Goods produced by a firm. (2) The
information returned by a computer to its user.
Overadequacy
The inability of a property to yield a reasonable return on value of the land and the reproduction cost of improvements (less accumulated physical depreciation) because of its adaptation to the production
of more goods or services that can be profitably sold in the market available to
it. See Super-adequacy and functional obsolescence.
Overall Age/Life Method
Method of estimating accrued depreciation
based on straight-line depreciation in which the building is assumed to depreciate
by a constant percentage each year over its economic life.
Overall Property Tax Rate Limits
A form of tax and expenditure limitation,
applicable to all governments in the state, in which an upper limit is placed on
either the property tax rate or the rate of increase in the property tax rate.
Overall Rate (OAR)
A capitalization rate that blends all
requirements of discount, recapture, and effective tax rates for both land and improvements;
used to convert annual net operating income into an indicated overall property value.
Overimprovement
An improvement whose cost exceeds the
cost of an alternative improvement by more than the excess of the present worth
of the given improvement and the land over the present worth of the alternative
improvement and the land, often because a structure is too large or too costly for
the most profitable use of the site. Contrast underimprovement.
Overlap
The amount by which one photograph duplicates
the area covered by another photograph, usually expressed as a percentage. Overlap
may be end or forward (along the flight path) or side taken during two or more parallel
flights); both end and side overlap are customary when more than one line is flown.
Overlay
A transparent medium on which data or features (for example, floodplains,
flight lines and/or area to be photographed) are plotted to be superimposed on a
map, thus avoiding defacing the map. (2) Digitally merging two digital data sets.
Ownership
The rights to the use of property, to
the exclusion of others.
Owner Name
The person or entity of record that is on file with county jurisdictions as being the owner of the property.