Property Law Flashcards

1
Q

Real property

A

encompassed by land and permanent constructions

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2
Q

chattel

A

refers to a catch-all category of personal possessions or moveable goods

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3
Q

Intellectual property

A

refers to intangible creations of the mind. I.e: copyrights, patents, brands

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4
Q

Fee simple absolute

A

to x and his/her heirs; refer to outright possession to inherited land regardless of future circumstances.

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5
Q

life estate

A

to x for life; refer to outright possession to inherited land regardless of future circumstances.

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6
Q

condition subsequent

A

to x, upon the condition that

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7
Q

determinable

A

“to x so long as…” capable of being brought to an end under given conditions

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8
Q

Possession

A

ownership, control, or occupancy of any object by a person

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9
Q

Alienable

A

transferable. an interest in property is alienable if it may be conveyed by one party to another

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10
Q

zoning ordinance

A

outlines permitted uses for various sections of land

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11
Q

covenants

A

real covenants are covenants that run with land. a covenant that runs with land is enforceable against and or by future owners of that land

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12
Q

adverse possession

A

a person in possession of another’s land can acquire valid title to it so long as certain requirements are met

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13
Q

actual possession

A

having physical ownership over an object

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14
Q

Open and Notorious

A

possession of the property is not covert or hidden, but obvious to others

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15
Q

Exclusive possession

A

claimant must hold possession of land for himself and not for another

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16
Q

Hostile claim

A

an individual occupies the real property of another without the true owner’s consent

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17
Q

Continuous and uninterrupted possession

A

continuous occupation of someone else’s property without permission

18
Q

Dominant Estate/ Servient estate

A

privilege of the owner of a parcel of land (or dominant estate”, concerning the owner of another parcel of land (or servient estate). Owner of servient estate may not interfere with such a privilege

19
Q

Affirmative

A

Rights to another’s land

20
Q

Negative

A

right to prevent uses on anothers land

21
Q

Expressed or implied

A

you have a legally binding, non-possessory “interest” in another party’s land in a limited way

22
Q

Tenants

A

have rights to use, possession, exclusion, quiet enjoyment of their property

23
Q

Constructive eviction

A

landlord is not repairing what should be repaired

24
Q

Eviction

A

removal of tenant from property so it can be rented to someone else

25
Q

sublease

A

allows an original tenant to sublease a property to another tenant, making the new tenant the sublessee

26
Q

periodic tenancy

A

a type of lease agreement that continues for successive periods until the tenant gives the landlord notification that they want to end the tenancy

27
Q

tenancy at will

A

tenancy without a predetermined duration. either party can terminate this tenancy at any time

28
Q

tenancy at sufferance

A

a tenant wrongfully holds a property past the duration period of the tenancy

29
Q

Takings (eminent domain)

A

takins refer to the power of the state to take possession of your property. The government can take property for public services such as schools and roadways

30
Q

Just compensation

A

refers to the appraised fair market value

31
Q

Lucas v. SC Coastal Commission

A

The Court ultimately decides it is a regulatory taking. In a regulatory taking, the government restricts a person’s use of their property to the point of it constituting a taking.

32
Q

Kelo v. City of new london

A

redefined public purpose

33
Q

Nuisance

A

A nuisance refers to a property owner that interferes with the use and enjoyment of another’s property

34
Q

Public Nuisance

A

unreasonable interference with a right shared by general public

35
Q

Private nuisance

A

interference with use and enjoyment of land that “substantially and unreasonably” hinders an individual’s enjoyment of their property

36
Q

Injunctive relief

A

goal of many nuisance cases. For nuisance causing behavior, plaintiffs want an order from a court that halts the nuisance

37
Q

Coming to the nuisance

A

refers to an instance in which the plaintiff moves to an area and sues a pre-existing nuisance such as noise, pollution, etc.

38
Q

Regulatory taking

A

the government restricts a person’s use of their property

39
Q

Taking(eminent domain)

A

the power of the state to take possession of your property

40
Q

fifth amendment

A

states that the government cannot take property without just compensation