II. SUBSEQUENT IN TIME: ACQUISITION OF PROPERTY BY FIND, ADVERSE POSSESSION & GIFT (125-69, 175-89) Flashcards

1
Q

color of title

A

refers to claim founded on written instrument (i.e. deed, will, judicial decree) which is invalid unbeknownst to the possessor. In this case, the grantee without knowledge of the defect takes possession under color of title. In most states, color of title is not required to be an adverse possessor (although it is sufficient to satisfy this element)

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2
Q

What does a finder of property acquire (CL)?

A

A finder of property acquires (i) no rights in mislaid property, (ii) is entitled to possession of lost property against everyone except the true owner, and (iii) is entitled to keep abandoned property

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3
Q

Lost

A

accidentally parted with and doesn’t know where to find; F entitled to possession against all world except true O (if F is trespasser, employee, guest, etc owner of property gets possessory rights)

ex. O does not notice his watch has slipped off his wrist and landed on street

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4
Q

Mislaid

A

intentionally placed; owner of premises entitled to possession against the world except true O (bc O might return trying to find it)

ex. O lays watch on sink in hotel rm and forgets to pick it up

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5
Q

Abandoned

A

O intentionally relinquished ownership; F obtains possession and title if he has control over the property with intent to assert ownership

ex. O throws his old watch into a garbage can bc a new battery for it would cost too much

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6
Q

Defense of Jus Tertii

A

Defense that neither the plaintiff nor the defendant is the true owner, but that the property belongs to a third party. In Armory, the court says this defense is not allowed because the court can only decide the relative rights of people before it; thus Delamirie must show that his relationship to the stone is stronger than Armory’s (do not have to show absolute right)

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7
Q

Armory v. Delamirie

A

Armory-Delamirie-Jewelry

Initial finder has superior right to everyone but true owner (but, if original finder loses item and B find it, original finder still has superior right)

Facts: Plaintiff, a chimney sweep, found a jewel and took it to the defendant’s shop. The jeweler took the stones and gave him back the socket without the stones.

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8
Q

Goal of Restitution Measure?

A

goal is get everyone back to zero (no unjust enrichment)

F recovers from J, O recovers from J, J recovers from F

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9
Q

Chain of Title: who can O sue?

A

O can sue anyone in the chain (law wants to protect O above all; if this were not the case and O could only sue current possessor, individuals could play keep away from O)

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10
Q

Subrogation

A

Where an insurance company pays you and thus buys your right to go after ∆ for damages (assume rights of the insured)

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11
Q

“Benefit of the Bargain” Rule

A

If X gifted the painting to Y, X can only recover the market value at the moment when X gave it away, not the present market value (because we don’t want X to get the benefit for selling hot goods)

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12
Q

claim of title v color of title

A

claim of title expresses the necessary adversity for adverse possession

color of title means claim is based on written instrument or judgment that is defective, it is sufficient but usually not necessary for adverse possession

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13
Q

grantor does not own the land deeded, grantor was mentally incompetent, deed was improperly executed - these are all examples of ______________

A

color of title where grantee w/o knowledge of the defect takes possession under color of title

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14
Q

Hannah v. Peel

A

Hannah loves brooches.

If owner of house has not moved into the house, owner is not in constructive possession of articles therein of which he is unaware; since Peel had never occupied the house, Hannah was entitled to the brooch

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15
Q

McAvoy v. Medina

A

MvM-Mislaid

When true owner never came back to claim it, P requested that D give him the money and D refused. Court held that the pocketbook was not lost but mislaid, and thus P (finder) had acquired no rights.

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16
Q

Quitclaim Deed

A

gives whatever interest you have

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17
Q

What must an adverse possessor file to have title and name as owner recorded in the courthouse?

A

quiet title action

adverse possessors will not have recordable title; if they wish to have name as owner recorded in courthouse, they must file a quiet title action against the former owner (usually have to do this to sell to someone, since a person will be wary of buying land with no recordable title)

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18
Q

constructive possession

A

when law treats as if he is in possession although he is not or he is unaware of it

ex. landowner is in constructive possession of the objects located under the surface of her land

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19
Q

If the finder is a trespasser who prevails?

A

Owner of premises where object is found always prevails over trespassing finder

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20
Q

Who prevails when object is found under or embedded in the soil?

A

Owner of premises (exception: treasure trove where it was intentionally buried with intent of returning to claim it can go to finder or landowner)

21
Q

Popov v. Hiyashi

A

Ct rules Popov had pre-possessory right in ball because he took significant but incomplete steps towards securing it and was interrupted only by unlawful acts of others; thus, ball should be sold and proceeds divided between π and ∆ (since ∆ was not a wrongdoer – did not impede π’s efforts to catch ball)

22
Q

Rule of Equitable Division

A

order property sold and divide proceeds among claimants when there are multiple finders of lost or abandoned property

as in Popov v. Hiyashi

23
Q

trover

A

suit to recover value of P’s chattel that D had converted (usually by selling it to an unknown party) - action permitted against anyone who refused to deliver up the P’s chattel.

In effect, P waives right to the return of the chattel and insists that D be subjected to a forced purchase of it

24
Q

replevin

A

bring replevin to recover possession of a chattel D wrongfully distrained

25
Q

ejectment

A

bring ejectment to recover possession of land

26
Q

replevin and ejectment were suits to recover ____________

A

possession

27
Q

trespass, case, and trover were suits to recover _____________

A

damages

28
Q

Benefits of adverse possession?

A

protects title of occupiers when it’s hard to prove, reward productive use (efficient), clarifies title, honors expectations

29
Q

Requirements of adverse possession?

A
  1. actual entry giving exclusive possession
  2. open and notorious
  3. adverse and under a claim of right
  4. continuous and uninterrupted
30
Q

If possessor abandons the property for any period of time, without intent to return, is continuity of adverse possession lost?

A

Yes - possession returns constructively to true owner. If adverse possessor later returns the statute of limitations begins to run anew.

NOTE: If adverse possessor is ousted and then reenters, he can tack on his previous period of adverse possession.

31
Q

Does adverse possessor acquire all interests in the property?

A

no, adverse possessor only acquires interest of whoever holds land at time he begins possession

if future interest was created before adverse possessor took possession, these are not adversely possessed (i.e. if life estate was in place before statute started running, adverse possessor only acquires life estate and statute starts again when remainder kicks in)

if future interest was created after adverse possessor took possession, statute would run against O and all successors in interest

32
Q

What makes it a req to have written agreements for land?

A

Statute of Frauds: Typically requires a written agreement for land; however courts have found ways to enforce oral agreements between neighbors on boundaries.

33
Q

Van Valkenburgh v. Lutz

A

VV - L tried to take tip of V

Court rules in favor of VV; claims Lutz’s possession was not hostile (i.e. he thought he owned all the land; court claims he needs to know he did not in order to satisfy that standard); Lutz did not actually possess enough of the land (but, true point of that standard is to make sure true owner is put on notice, which he was here)

34
Q

Manillo v. Gorski

A

ll 2 small

Court holds in cases where encroachment is so small, owner must be given actual notice (mere constructive notice is not sufficient); there is no presumption of notice. P wanted the court to use the Maine rule of aggressive trespass but court applies the objective test and says D’s possession only need to be open and notorious.

35
Q

Voidable title

A

Owner intends to pass title, but can void transaction because of fraud or misrepresentation (i.e. buyer purchases it with bad check); True owner can void title until purchaser sells to BFP

36
Q

Voidable title: Can owner go after BFP after BFP purchases from original purchaser?

A

No, owner can sue original purchaser, but once original purchaser sells to BFP, O cannot go after BFP (one area where BFP is favored over true owner)

37
Q

Void title

A

owner does not intend to pass title or has no capacity to do so

38
Q

Void title: Can owner go after BFP?

A

A BFP from a thief is not protected against the claim of the owner unless the statute of limitations has run on the owner.

39
Q

Is act of entrusting sufficient to protect BFP?

A

Yes

40
Q

O’Keeffe v. Snyder

A

SoL starts when owner first knows or reasonably should know through due diligence where the stolen goods are

O’Keeffe claims paintings were stolen and thus statute of limitations never started running. The paintings first went missing in 1946 when Steiglitz was showing the 2 paintings at his gallery, but O’Keefe did not report them missing until 1972. Snyder claims he was BFP and bought the paintings in 1975 from Frank, who had had the paintings in family for over 30 years. Since the statute of limitations was 6 years for personal property, Snyder claims that Frank had adversely possessed them.

41
Q

The Winkfield

A

Postmaster sues Winkfield for mail that sank to sea when Winkfield rammed his ship; Postmaster recovers. Then a person who sent package sues Winkfield, but he can’t recover because Winkfield has already paid. When Winkfield stands in postmaster’s shoes after paying him, he is not liable to shippers (as postmaster would not have been for losing mail absent negligence).

42
Q

Rule of Increase

A

The offspring of animals belong to the owner of the mother. But if A takes possession of B’s cow before B’s cow gives birth, and later A requires adverse possession to the cow then A also gains rights to keep the calf because adverse possession relates back to the point when A first took possession.

43
Q

Doctrine of Market Overt

A

Some European countries follow the doctrine that a BFP may acquire good title from a thief if the sale takes place in an open market.

44
Q

How are disability provisions limited?

A

because only disabilities specified in the statute can be considered and usually only disability of the owner at the time adverse possession begins count

45
Q

Law of Accession

A

When one person adds to the property of another by labor alone, the general rule is that if you took it willfully then property goes back to A, REGARDLESS. Can’t argue that you put it to “better use”.

Exception: If B acted in good faith and significantly increased value, then B will get to keep final product, but must pay A for his property.

46
Q

res

A

thing

47
Q

Animus possidendi

A

intention to possess

48
Q

Cujus est solum, ejus est usque ad coelem et ad infernos (ad coelom)

A

to whomever the soil belongs, he owns also to the sky and to the depths