LGST 101 Property Law Flashcards

1
Q

Real vs personal/intellectual property

A

Real is something that can’t be moved (house, trees)

Personal and intellectual can be moved

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2
Q

5 Theories about property

A
  1. Occupation theory—> Supposed to go to places that haven’t been occupied and occupy them
  2. Natural rights theory—> Right to property seen as natural. It naturally belongs to man
  3. Labor theory—> Put work into something, you own what you put labor into
  4. Contract theory—> Property rights recognized because of social enforcement
  5. Social utility theory—> There is a requirement for recognition of property rights because it is essential for humans to thrive
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3
Q

Johnson v. M’Intosh

A

The US has the exclusive right to sell land (and the Indian tribes have no such right). As such, M’Intosh gets the land.

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4
Q

Conversion

A

Wrongful exercise of dominion over the personal property of another

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5
Q

Theft

A

Unauthorized taking of property from another with the intent to permanently deprive them of it (key difference from conversion is that theft requires intent while conversion does not)

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6
Q

Popov v. Hayashi

A

Conversion can still apply even without full possession, as pre-possessory interest gives someone the right to conversion. They both have equal rights to the baseball, so they split the proceeds

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7
Q

Keron v. Cashman

A

Since the boys playing with the sock of money weren’t trying to find money, they were all ruled to have equal claims to the money. As such, intent is important in determining who owns property. Ruling is to split the money equally amongst the boys

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8
Q

Swift v. Gifford

A

Gifford gets the whale instead of Swift because of customs of the industry that define possession as whoever’s harpoon was found in the whale when killed

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9
Q

Bailment

A

When personal property (not real property) is transferred from the bailor to the bailee. Usually is temporary transfer of property

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10
Q

Bailee

A

Takes possession of something already owned with the owner’s (bailor’s) consent

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11
Q

Bailor

A

The transferrer of the property

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12
Q

Involuntary/constructive bailee

A

Takes possession of a thing by means of some non-intentional act and has obligation to protect the goods
Ex: Pet owner dies, pet ends up with aunt. Aunt is the bailee. Didn’t intend to take possession, but must do so.

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13
Q

Duty to Return of Bailee

A

Absolute–> must return the thing temporarily given to them when requested
For involuntary bailee–only liable for not returning if the bailee’s own negligence hindered the return

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14
Q

Duty of care for the bailee

A

Must ensure safety of the property. If fails to uphold duty, liable for damages. And if uses property without permission, liable for conversion
Levels of care depends on who it benefits more
If the bailor has a better deal, bailee owes very small duty of care, only liable if gross negligence by the bailee (disregard safety of those around you)
If deal benefits both equally, bailee owes a reasonable or ordinary degree of care. Liable for ordinary negligence
If bailee has a better deal (typically if paid), bailee owes extraordinary deal of care, but not absolute

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15
Q

Adverse possession

A

When another person occupies the land with the intention of possessing it as their own

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16
Q

Requirements of Adverse Possession

A
  1. Duration (length depends on state statute)
  2. Actual possession–> adverse possessor must actually be in possession of someone else’s property, and have a physical entry on the land
  3. Open and notorious –> possession must be obvious to anyone who bothers to look, so if the true owner looked, he would know there is a trespasser
  4. Adverse/hostile–> this means the possession infringes on the rights of the true owner (didn’t give consent). Use the objective standard (intent to possess doesn’t matter as long as acted toward the land as if possessed) or the subjective standard (have to recognize taking someone else’s land, intent matters)
  5. Exclusive–> Adverse possessor does not share control of the property with anyone else and excludes others from possessions as if he was actual owner
  6. Continuous and uninterrupted–> Single adverse possessor must maintain continuous possession of the property
    Character of the land should be relevant too (middle of nowhere Alaska v. Manhattan different standards of getting adverse possession–> in-line with the whole reasonable)
17
Q

Nome v. Fagerstrom

A

Fagerstroms’ meet requirements of adverse possession for the north part of the land, not the south part

18
Q

Private Nuisance

A

When plaintiff’s use and enjoyment (not possession of) their land is interfered with substantially and unreasonably through a thing or activity.
Generally involves an interference with the physical senses
Something that is annoying to you

19
Q

Public Nuisance

A

When a person unreasonably interferes with a right that the general public shares in common

20
Q

Nuisance per fact

A

Interference with the use and enjoyment of the land
Consider the gravity of harm (extent of the harm, nature of the harmed activity–how important it is, how suited to the locale it is, ability to avoid it)
Utility of the harmful activity
Social value to the locale (place where it happens) of the harmful activity
Suitability to locale of the harmful activity
Impracticability of preventing activity’s harm

21
Q

Nuisance per se

A

Activity is barred by legislation, any time and any circumstance
Nuisance no matter where it is located

22
Q

To be liable of a nuisance:

A

Level of interference must be substantial and either:

  1. Intention and unreasonable or
  2. Unintentional but result of a negligent, reckless, or dangerous activity

And then balance parties’ interests:
Gravity of harm to the plaintiff (harm’s extent and character, harmed activity’s social value and suitability to the locale, plaintiff’s ability to avoid the harm) vs.
Utility of the defendant’s conduct (its social value and suitability to the locale, impracticality of preventing the plaintiff’s harm)

23
Q

Sturges v. Bridgman

A

Sturges built a consulting room at the end of his house which was only separated by a small wall to the defendant’s kitchen, where the defendant made loud noises. This disrupted Sturges’ practice in the consulting room—ruled a nuisance

24
Q

Borton v. Forest Hills Country Club

A

A nuisance is found for people hitting golf balls onto Borton’s property.
 Even though the club has the right to use Borton’s property for a specified interest, FHCC’s use was a greater burden than what was intended

25
Q

Fee Simple

A

Owning the entirety of something, but still some limitations

26
Q

Fee simple absolute

A

May last indefinitely and passes to the owner’s heirs. Created by grantor and given to A.
Modern approach says that intent is enough, language isn’t necessary–can just say “to A” not “to A and heirs”

27
Q

Fee simple determinable

A

G to A for as long as/until/while nobody does the thing G doesn’t want done on the land
Automatically reverts to G if condition isn’t met

28
Q

Fee simple subject to condition subsequent (and right of re-entry)

A

G to A on condition that nobody does the thing G decrees ought not be done on the land. If anybody does, G can choose to re-enter and terminate the estate. More flexible than fee simple determinable as doesn’t automatically revert

29
Q

Fee simple determinable with executory interest

A

G to A on condition. If they violate the condition, then it goes to someone else (C)

30
Q

Life estate “Pur autre vie” (For somebody else’s life):

A

G to A for the life of B

G gives estate to A, who transfers it to B, and life estate lasts until B dies

31
Q

Patent

A

Invention or discovery of a process, machine. Exclusive rights for inventing something. Must be:
1. New (never been invented before)
2. Useful (not some abstract math formula with no practical applications)
3. Non-obvious (contains something truly inventive and isn’t just an elementary advance in the art)
Excludes music, stories, and the like
Federal, 20 years non renewable
1. Bargain theory (people will invent more things if incentivized by property rights–> patent law encourages this by being able to protect their invention)
2. Natural rights theory (what people create is theirs, so won’t disclose things, but patent law requires the disclosure)

32
Q

Trademark

A

Word, name, symbol, or device adopted and used by a manufacturer or merchant to identify and distinguish his goods
Federal law, 10 years and renewable

33
Q

Generic Trademark

A

Too successful, like Google or Kleenex. Generic terms are never eligible for trademark protection.

34
Q

Trade Secret

A

Private information that gives its owner an economic advantage over competitors that the owner is trying to keep private.
Governed by state statues which can be protected forever thru non-disclosure agreements and non-compete clauses

35
Q

duPont v. Christopher

A

Taking aerial photos of a protected area that is meant to be kept secret is an improper means of obtaining one’s trade secret

36
Q

Copyright

A

Congress has the power to promote progress of society by securing for limited times to authors the exclusive rights to their writings
Federal law
Some works are excluded from copyright (government documents like laws)

37
Q

MGM v. Grokster and StreamCast

A

Grokster and StreamCast are in violation of copyright infringement, as illegal downloads of music were committed on their site

38
Q

Fair Use

A

Fair use is a defense to infringement of copyright claims

39
Q

4 Factor Test of Fair Use

A
  1. Purpose and character of the use, including if it is for commercial or nonprofit educational purposes (needs to be noncommercial for it to be fair use)
  2. Nature of the copyrighted work (noncommercial for it to be considered fair use)
  3. Amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole (not that much used = fair use)
  4. Effect of the use on the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work (little effect for it to be fair use)