MBE Property Flashcards

1
Q

OWNERSHIP OF LAND > Joint Tenancy

A

Joint Tenancy — Each party owns HALF with RIGHT OF SURVIVORSHIP (ROS)

Right of Survivorship — The moment one tenant dies, the surviving tenant acquires the decedent’s share of the property automatically.

  • Survivorship always prevails at death: The decedent tenant’s share cannot be devised via will (effective at death), nor can it be passed their heirs by inheritance, SURVIVORSHIP prevails here and it goes to the other joint tenant through ROS.

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How do you create a joint tenancy?

  • Grantor must make a clear expression of intent; PLUS
  • Must be survivorship language, e.g., “as joint tenants with a right of survivorship.”

Four Unities [PITT] — to create/maintain JT. If any fail > tenancy in common (baseline)

  • Possession - Every joint tenant has an equal right to possess the whole of the property.
  • Interest - Joint tenants must have an equal shares of the same type of interest.
  • Time - Joint tenants must receive their interests at the same time.
  • Title - Joint tenants must receive their interests in the same instrument of title.

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SEVERANCE — JT terminated and becomes TIC

Inter Vivos Transfer destroys Survivorship

  • Transfer during life will destroy/sever the right of survivorship and convert the estate into a tenancy in common (no survivorship)
  • 3+ Joint Tenants — Conveyance by only one of 3 or more joint tenants only destroys the conveyor’s interest and does not destroy the joint tenancy + ROS to the remaining joint tenants.
  • Mortgages (TITLE theory) — A joint tenant grants a mortgage interest in the joint tenancy to a creditor.Basically, they are transferring title to the bank as collateral in exchange for a loan. Transfer = severance.
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2
Q

OWNERSHIP OF LAND > Tenancy in Common

A

Tenancy in Common (Default concurrent interest)—A concurrent estate with no right of survivorship. Each owner has a distinct, undivided interest in the property.

  • Tenants in common can receive their interests at different times and from different conveyances.
  • Tenants in common can also hold unequal shares of the land, even if each tenant will have full use of all of the premises.

NO RIGHT OF SURVIVORSHIP: Each co-tenant’s interest is freely alienable by inter vivos and testamentary transfer, is inheritable, and is subject to claims of the tenant’s creditors.

  • Grantees becomes TIC with other tenants.
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3
Q

OWNERSHIP OF LAND >
Tenancy by the Entirety

A

Tenancy by the Entirety—limited to married couples and includes the Right of Survivorship

  • One spouse may not unilaterally convey (and thus, sever and destroy survivorship) without other spouses consent.
  • Married couple does not have to own land as TBE (i.e, vacation home)
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4
Q

RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS OF CONCURRENT OWNERS

A

A. Possession and Use

Possesion

  • Each co-tenant has right to possess all of the property, regardless of that co-tenant’s share and regardless of the type of co-tenancy.
  • Unless there’s an agreement to the contrary

Ouster

  • If one tenant wrongfully excludes another co-tenant from possession of the whole or any part of the whole of the premises, there is an OUSTER.
  • Remedies: Injunction to gain access; or damages for their share of the fair rental value of the property for the time they were wrongfully deprived of possession.

B. Third Party Rents and Operating Expenses

Rents and Profits

  • Rent received from a third party’s possession of the property, minus operating expenses (including necessary repairs), are divided based on ownership interests of each co-tenant

Operating Expenses - (Necessary charges, such as taxes or mortgage payments)

  • Divided based on ownership interests of each co-tenant
  • A co-tenant can collect contribution from the other co-tenants for payments in excess of her share of the operating expenses.

Repairs

  • There is no right to reimbursement from co-tenants for necessary repairs.
  • However, the co-tenant who makes the repairs can get credit in a partition action.

Improvements

  • There is no right to reimbursement from co-tenants
  • However, the co-tenant who makes the imporvements can get credit in a partition action.

C. Partition

Remedy of Partition
A joint tenant or tenant in common has a unilateral right to judicial partition, either in kind (physical division of the tract into parcels) or by sale and division of the proceeds (Based on ownership interests as modified by permitted recoupments for improvements, repairs, taxes, and the like).

  • Partition IN KIND is generally preferred, but
  • Partition BY SALE is permitted when a practical and equitable physical division of the property CANNOT be made.
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5
Q

REAL ESTATE CONTRACT (Key Elements)

In general, real estate purchases involve a period of several months between the time the contract is signed and the closing date.

A

Real Estate Contract

  • Does NOT transfer legal title (Deed) - that happens the on closing date via Deed
  • As holder of Legal title, the seller still has a right to possess the property.

KEY ELEMENTS:

1) MUST be IN SIGNED WRITING — Subject to the Statute of Frauds.

Exceptions:

  • Part performance – partial payment, possesion, improvements (NEED 2)
  • Detrimental reliance (or estoppel) – reasonably relied on the K

2) MUST Include Essential Terms: Parties, Description, Price, Terms, etc. — e.g. money, financing.

3) Execution transfers EQUITABLE TITLE via equitable conversionrisk of loss on shifts to the buyer

  • Buyer is responsible for any damage to the property that happens during that period.
  • Action against seller: Due to the doctrine of equitable conversion, a judgment obtained against a seller after the execution of a land-sale contract is NOT enforceable against the real property—even if the claim arose before the contract was executed.

4) MARKETABLE TITLE IMPLIED in K — (Unless parties specifically contract for quitclaim deed)

  • However, A seller is not actually required to provide marketable title until that closing date arrives. (Via Deed)

Marketable Title: Clear Ownership. Title that is free from defects. The standard is that of a reasonable buyer (Would a reasonable buyer have concern about the health of this title). Title must be free of defects such as:

  • Title acquired by adverse possesion that hasn’t been quieted
  • Private encumbrances (e.g., mortgages, liens, restrictive covenant, easements)
  • Violation of a zoning ordinance (not building codes)

Remedy: A defect in title must be cured or fixed before closing date. If the seller cannot deliver marketable title, the buyer’s remedy is recission of the contract.

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Delays

  • Generally, time is NOT of the essence. Failure to close on a set date may be a breach but its NOT grounds for recission. (specific performance still available if able to perform within a reasonable time after)
  • However, if the contract or parties notify that time IS of the essence… Failure to close on a set date is grounds for recission, you can walk away.

Duty to Disclose Known, Physical, and Material Defects To the Buyer (“as is” won’t suffice)

  • Concerned with hidden defects known to the Seller
  • Material defect must substantially affect the value of the home, health and safety of its occupants, or the desirability of the home;
  • General disclaimers (e.g., “as is”) will not satisfy the seller’s duty to disclose known defects.

Merger

  • obligations contained in the contract are merged into the deed.
  • If there was something important in the contract that is not in the deed, the cause of action is lost because the deed controls after closing.

Implied Warranty of Fitness or Suitability

  • Applies to defects in NEW construction
  • In most jurisdictions, both the initial homeowner-purchaser and subsequent purchasers may recover damages.
  • suit for breach of this warranty must be brought within a reasonable time after
    discovery
    of the defect

Seller’s Remedies on Buyer’s Breach

  • Damages: Measure is the difference between the K price and market price
  • Recission: Seller can sell the property to someone else (K is gone)
  • Specific Performance

Buyer’s Remedies on Seller’s Breach

  • Rescission & restitution: Seek return of paid deposits & other restitution
  • Specific performance: Seek injunction ordering seller to transfer title with abatement of purchase price
  • Damages: Loss of bargain (market value at time of breach − contract price) Liquidated damages, and Incidental & consequential damages that were contemplated during sales contract or reasonably foreseeable

legal title refers to the actual ownership of the land. Additionally, a person who has legal title to land has the right to transfer ownership of the property to another party. What this means is that they have the right to sell the property.

Alternatively, equitable title is generally associated with a person’s financial interest in the property. Because of this, a person may have equitable title to a property that they have invested in, while another person actually holds legal title to that same property.

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6
Q

DEEDS (Key Elements)

A

Deed

MERGER of Real Estate K

  • Any obligations contained in the contract can only be enforced if they are incorporated into the Deed, Real Estate K is gone.
  • If there is a breach now, you sue under the Deed itself, not the Real Estate K, it doesn’t exist anymore.

Execution conveys LEGAL TITLE (Ownership)

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KEY ELEMENTS

1) IDENTIFIES the GRANTOR and GRANTEE

  • A deed that does not identify the grantee is ineffective until the grantee’s name is added or determined.
  • A deed to a nonexistent grantee is void as to the nonexistent grantee.

2) WORDS OF TRANSFER

  • Deed must include words of a present intent to transfer.
  • Be on the lookout for situations where delivery is contingent, incomplete, or seemingly revocable

3) DESCRIPTION of the PROPERTY interest being transferred

MUST include sufficient DESCRIPTION of property (legal description not required)

  • Street address, meets and bounds, based on physical attributes, or reasonable person could locate.
  • extrinsic evidence can be admitted to clarify an ambiguous description

4) GRANTOR’S signature

  • the Grantor’s signature is required for execution to be effective.
  • if the signature is forged, the deed is void, even if purchasor is a BFP
  • Does not need to be witnessed or notarized

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The transfer is EFFECTIVE once the deed DELIVERED and ACCEPTED

1) Delivery of Deed by GrantorGRANTOR’S PRESENT INTENT TO TRANSFER TITLE (Physical delivery NOT required)

Satisfied by:
a) Grantor’s present intent to transfer title

  • intent to transfer can also be implied from the grantor’s words or other conduct.

b) Presumed upon:

  • physical delivery of deed
  • recording
  • unconditional delivery to agent
  • grantee’s possession of property/deed

2) ACCEPTANCE is PRESUMED when the transfer is beneficial to the grantee

  • Must be immediate rejection if they don’t want the Deed

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Brokers

can be involved in land sale contracts so long as they do not practice law.

  • What can they do? Prepare a contract of sale.
  • What can’t they do? draft a legal document like a deed or mortgage.

Agents

A principal can appoint an agent to execute a deed.

  • Equal Dignities Rule: If the agent is required to sign (e.g.,execute a deed), then the agency relationship must be created in writing

legal title refers to the actual ownership of the land. Additionally, a person who has legal title to land has the right to transfer ownership of the property to another party. What this means is that they have the right to sell the property.

Alternatively, equitable title is generally associated with a person’s financial interest in the property. Because of this, a person may have equitable title to a property that they have invested in, while another person actually holds legal title to that same property.

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7
Q

DEEDS > 3 Types of Deeds >
General Warranty Deed

A

General Warranty Deed Provides the greatest amount of title protection

  • Grantor warrants title against ALL Title defects (forever), even if the grantor did not cause the title defects. (nothing to do with physical condition of the property)
  • If there is a problem with the title (below) = breach of warranty

6 WARRANTIES of the QUALITY OF TITLE
1) I am the legal owner of the land
2) I have the legal right to sell the land
3) No one can stop me from selling the land
4) If someone has an interest in the land, I will defend it
5) I will fix it, and
6) I will cover expenses

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Six implied covenants in the General warranty deed

PRESENT COVENANTS

1) Covenant of SEISEN

  • Warrants that the deed describes the land in question;

2) Covenant of the RIGHT TO CONVEY

  • Warrants that the grantor (i.e., the seller) has the right to convey the property;

3) Covenant against ENCUMBRANCES

  • Warrants that there are no undisclosed (not listed on the deed) encumbrances on the property that could limit its value.

FUTURE COVENANTS

4) Covenant of QUIET ENJOYMENT

  • Grantor promises that the grantee’s possession will not be disturbed by a third-party’s lawful claim for title;

5) Covenant of WARRANTY

  • Grantor promises to defend against future lawful claims of title by a third party and to compensate the grantee for any loss sustained by the claim of superior title.
  • Not breached until a third party interferes with possession or brings a valid claim they are able to succeed on

6) Covenant of FURTHER ASSURANCES

  • Grantor promises to fix future title problems.
  • Guarantees that the grantor will do whatever is necessary to perfect title should it turn out to be defective

You have nothing to worry about

defects

  • Title acquired by adverse possesion that hasn’t been quieted
  • Private encumbrances (e.g., mortgages, liens, restrictive covenant, easements)
  • Violation of a zoning ordinance (not building codes)
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8
Q

DEEDS > 3 Types of Deeds >
Special Warranty Deed

A

Special Warranty Deed — Conveys clean title. Promises all is ok while current owner lived there.

1) Grantor has not conveyed the same estate or interest to anyone other than the grantee;
AND
2) Estate is free from encumbrances made by grantor.

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9
Q

DEEDS > 3 Types of Deeds >
Quitclaim Deed

A

Quitclaim Deed Conveys only what title seller has. NO PROMISES AS TO QUALITY OF OWNERSHIP/TITLE.

  • Conveys title of Property, but
  • Quality of Ownership; who knows?
  • if there are problems, you can not sue me
  • buyer beware!!!
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10
Q

Options and Rights of First Refusal

A

Options - In an option contract, one party acquires the right to purchase property, typically during a specific time period, in exchange for consideration.

a. Protection against revocation and termination by death/incapacity

  • option does not terminate upon the death or incapacity of the grantor of the option, unlike the termination of an offer upon the death of the offeror.

b. Counteroffer without rejection

  • The holder of an option can make a counteroffer to the grantor of the option without losing the right to exercise the option. (not a conteroffer - rejection)

c. Acceptance - Mailbox Rule Doesn’t Apply

  • The mailbox rule, which treats an acceptance as valid when mailed, does not apply. The holder’s decision to exercise the option must be received by the grantor of the option within any time period specified in the contract.

Right of First Refusal - Preemptive right that gives its holder the opportunity to acquire property prior to its transfer to another, and it is valid unless it is unreasonable.

  • The right may be limited in various ways, such as the time period during which the right exists, the transactions to which it applies, and its transferability to another person.
  • Rights of first refusal are generally subject to RAP, so this contingent future interest is void if it there is any possibility that it could vest more than 21 years after some relevant life in being at the creation of the interest.
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11
Q

Restraints on Alienation of Property

A

A direct restraint on alienation is a restriction on transferring property and may be void as against public policy.

Disabling restraint

  • Prohibition on transfer of property interest by its owner
  • ALWAYS void

Forfeiture restraint

  • Restraint where owner forfeits property interest if owner attempts to transfer it
  • Restraint on future interest or life estate can be valid
  • a partial restraint—one that is for a limited time and a reasonable purpose—is generally valid.

Promissory restraint

  • Promise by property-interest holder not to transfer property interest (right of first refusal)
  • Can be valid
  • a partial restraint—one that is for a limited time and a reasonable purpose—is generally valid.

CONSIDER DELETING THIS CARD

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12
Q

MORTGAGES

A

MORTGAGE: A security device given by a borrower to a lender to secure payment of a loan

  • Mortgagor: The borrower
  • Mortgagee: The lender
  • borrower effectively giving lender an interest in the home

Big Picture

  • Lender lends money with interest (how they make their money) to someone who wants to purchase a home. To make sure they make their money, an interest is taken in the home as security.
  • When the loan is paid, everybody benefits; If payments are not made, the lender will foreclose on its interest and force a sale of the home to satisfy the debt.

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Mortgage Components (Loan using property as collateral):

1) Promissory Note = Borrower’s promise to pay back $ borrowed plus interest

2) Mortgage Document = Instrument that provides security for the note.

  • If you do not pay back $, they can take the property. Property goes up for sale, and they keep the proceeds to satisfy the outstanding debt.
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13
Q

MORTGAGES > Purchase Money Mortgage

A

Money borrowed to buy the house, ALWAYS HAS PRIORITY!!!!!

  • if you see a hypo where there are competing debts/loans, THIS mortgage always gets priority, paid first.
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14
Q

MORTGAGES > Future Advance Mortgage

A

A later loan
A line of credit used for home equity, construction, business, and commercial loans
(often referred to as a “second mortgage”)

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15
Q

MORTGAGES > Lien Theory vs. Title Theory

Based on Jurisdiction. Most (including FL) are Lien Theory states

A

(Lien/Title) Theory - is what the bank gains when a mortgage is taken out.

Majority of States are Lien Theory.
Minority (+ Florida) are Title theory

1) Lien Theory — Bank gains a LIEN on property, RESIDENT keeps LEGAL TITLE (can sell)

  • RULE: Does NOT sever Joint Tenancy

2) Title Theory — BANK gains LEGAL TITLE, resident has an equitable interest (can’t sell), when resident pays off the mortgage, then they receive title (can sell).

  • RULE: SEVERS JOINT TENANCY
  • Taking out a mortgage conveys LEGAL TITLE to the bank. Conveyance of ownership interest in a JT severs it and becomes a TIC (no more survivorship).

title grants rights to the owner to exercise various types of rights on the property such as selling rights, easement rights, development rights, possession rights, exclusive use, etc.

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16
Q

Mortgage Transfers by Mortgagor/Borrower

A

1) LIABILITY OF BORROWER

BORROWER REMAINS PERSONALLY LIABLE after the transfer to new owner (by deed [sale], by will, or by intestate succession) UNLESS:

  • Lender releases borrower; or
  • Lender modifies the subsequent transferee’s obligation.

i) Due-on-sale clauses – Lender has the option to demand immediate full payment upon transfer (acceleration clause). Unenforceable with certain transfers of residential real property:

  • Devise, descent, or transfer to joint tenant upon death
  • Transfer to spouse or child
  • Transfer to ex-spouse in divorce
  • Transfer to borrower’s living trust
  • Creation of subordinate lien without occupancy rights
  • Granting leasehold interest of less than 3 years without option to purchase

ii) Due-on-encumbrance clauses

  • An acceleration clause (full payment) when the mortgagor obtains a second mortgage or otherwise encumbers the property.

2) LIABILITY OF SUBSEQUENT TRANSFEREE

“Assumes” the mortgage

  • If the subsequent transferee assumes the mortgage, the mortgage and its terms are transferred from the original mortgagor to the subsequent transferee and the subsequent transferee becomes personally liable on the note. However, if subsequent transferee fails to pay, the bank can still go after the original owner unless they executed a NOVATION with the bank.

Takes “Subject to” the mortgage (presumtion)

  • Transferee is not personally liable upon default.
  • If the deed is silent or ambiguous as to liability, the subsequent transferee is considered
    to have taken title subject to the mortgage.
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17
Q

Mortgage Transfers by Mortgagee/Lender

A

transfering the note but not the mortgage.

  • RULE: the mortgage follows the note
  • A negotiable promissory note can be assigned by simply endorsing and delivering the note to the assignee.
  • However, a nonnegotiable promissory note requires a separate assignment document to transfer ownership.

transfering the mortgage but not the note.

  • Rule: The transfer is either (i) void, or (ii) the note follows the mortgage (Jurisdictions are split as to effect of transfer)
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18
Q

MORTGAGES > Assumable Mortgage

A

A mortgagor can freely transfer mortgaged land to a SUBSEQUENT OWNER but remains personally liable for the debt thereafter. The SUBSEQUENT OWNER takes the land subject to the mortgage obligation without personal liability for the debt UNLESS the SUBSEQUENT OWNER expressly agrees to ASSUME the mortgage, in which case the outstanding mortgage and its terms are transferred to the SUBSEQUENT OWNER.

Rule: SUBSEQUENT OWNER becomes personally liable on the note.

  • However, if SUBSEQUENT OWNER fails to pay, the bank can still go after the ORIGINAL owner unless they executed a NOVATION with the bank

If the assumption of the mortgage was part of the purchase price (discount), then the SUBSEQUENT OWNER may not raise defenses that the original mortgagor could have raised against enforcement of the mortgage obligation.

Many homebuyers typically take out a mortgage from a lending institution to finance the purchase of a home or property.

If the homeowner decides to sell their home later, they may be able to transfer their mortgage to the homebuyer. In this case, the original mortgage taken out is assumable.

By assuming the previous owner’s remaining debt, the buyer can avoid rigorous process of obtaining their own mortgage

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19
Q

MORTGAGES > Subject to

A

A mortgagor can freely transfer mortgaged land to a grantee but remains personally liable for the debt thereafter. Presumption is this unless the grantee expressly agrees to assume the mortgage.

Rule: Original Owner remains LIABLE on the note.

  • New owner takes the property but has no financial responsibility to the mortgage balance whatsoever, all respobsibility remains with the original owner.
  • BUT, Bank can (has the right to) foreclose on the property while the new owners are living there if payments are not made by the origianl owner
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20
Q

Alternatives to Mortgages—Equitable Mortgages

A

1) Deed of Trust – Operates like a mortgage but uses a trustee to hold title for the benefit of the lender (i.e., the beneficiary of the trust receiving the payments)

2) Installment Land Contract – The seller finances the purchase and retains title until the buyer makes the final payment on an installment plan.

Traditional rule: If the buyer breaches (i.e., misses a payment), the seller keeps the installment payments made and the property. (too harsh)

3 Modern approaches: States are trying to assist defaulting buyers. Treats an installment land contract like a mortgage, a buyer in default may redeem the property by tendering to the owner the full balance due under the contract prior to foreclosure.:

  • Allow the seller to retain ownership, but require some restitution to buyer for what’s already been paid.
  • Treat installment contracts as a mortgage, requiring the seller to foreclose to gain title to the property and the buyer has an equitable right of redemption and other protections;
  • Offer the buyer the equitable right of redemption i.e., the buyer can keep the property by paying the full balance of the installment contract at any time prior to the foreclosure sale

3) Absolute Deed – The mortgagor (borrower) transfers the deed to the property instead of conveying a security interest in exchange for the loan.

  • If this is a mortgage disguised as a sale, the borrower must prove a mortgage-like agreement (i.e., intent to secure the debt) by clear-and-convincing evidence (i.e., that there was an obligation created prior to or contemporaneously with the transfer); Parol evidence is admissible to make this showing;
  • Statute of Frauds does not bar oral evidence about the agreement.
  • If proven, a court treats the transfer as an equitable mortgage, unless competing equities (e.g., good-faith purchaser) take precedence.

4) Conditional Sale and Repurchase – The owner sells property to the lender who leases the property back to the owner in exchange for a loan.

  • The lender gives the owner the option to repurchase after the loan is paid off.
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21
Q

FORECLOSURE

A

WHAT IS FORECLOSURE – A foreclosure is a forced sale of an asset to pay off a debt. the proceeds of the sale are used to pay off the debt. The mortgagee must give notice before foreclosing.

1) Power of sale (private sale): Sale held by the mortgagee/lender

2) Judicial sale Sale under the supervision of a court

  • the mortgagee must give notice to the holders of any junior interest in the property

Deficiency Judgment

  • A mortgagor is responsible for remaining balance if the sale produces less than the mortgagor owes.
  • Lender can get a deficiency judgment for remaining balance

When Can the Mortgagee/Lender Take Possession?

  • Lien theory - Only when foreclosure is complete
  • Title theory - at any time (they have legal title)
  • Intermediate Title theory - point of default

WAYS TO AVOID FORECLOSURE

1) Equitable Redemption - Period of time from Notice of Foreclosure until Sale that residents can pay off full debt and keep property.

  • Can NEVER be waived! Public policy
  • Courts will intervene to prevent “clogging” (terms that make it harder for a borrower to exercise her equitable redemption)

2) Deed in lieu of foreclosure - Rather than face foreclosure and take a hit to credit, the mortgagor can convey the property to the mortgagee (lender) in exchange for releasing her from any outstanding debt.

  • Requires consent of both the mortgagor and the mortgagee.
  • Mortgagee takes the property along with any junior interests attached to the property (survives bc no forceclosure). The mortgagee generally may reserve the right to pursue a deficiency as measured by the difference between the outstanding mortgage obligation and the fair market value of the property against the mortgagor, but the mortgagor may bring an equitable action to set aside the conveyance if it is not reasonable and fair.

3) Renegotiating debt

  • Parties may renegotiate terms of promissory note & mortgage

EFFECT OF FORECLOSURE

1) On the Mortgagor - Eliminates their interest in the property

  • Exception: Statutory Redemption
  • Period of time after Foreclosure Sale until statutory time limit that mortgagor can pay foreclosure sale price to purchasing party to nullify foreclosure and redeem property.
  • Not automatic, by statute only

2) The mortgaged property - eliminates all of the following interests:

  • the mortgagor’s interest in the property
  • the mortgage interest being foreclosed upon (foreclosing party’s interest)
  • any junior interests attached to the property

3) on Foreclosed Property Purchasor

  • Takes the property free and clear of any junior mortgage (destroyed) and subject to any senior mortgage; BUT
  • May be subject to the mortgagor’s statutory right of redemption, if one exists.
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22
Q

FORECLOSURE > Priorities - Satisfying Competing Interests

A

Order

  1. Purchase Money Mortgage - always has priority
  2. Senior Interests (recorded)
  3. Junior Interests (recorded)
  4. Unrecorded Liens

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Senior interests: Interests acquired before the interest that is being foreclosed. They SURVIVE the foreclosure.

Junior interests: Interests acquired after the interest that is being foreclosed. They DON’T SURVIVE the foreclosure

  • if foreclosure by judicial sale, eliminated ONLY IF mortgagee gave them notice

GENERAL RULE
“First-in-time rule” – surviving debts are satisfied CHRONOLOGICALLY

EXCEPTIONS (Priority given)

1) Purchase Money mortgages

  • always has priority, even over earlier debts

2) Jr. Motgage Satisfying Recording act

  • A junior mortgage that satisfies the requirements of the state recording act (ex: notice) may take priority over an unknown, unrecorded senior mortgage.

3) Subordination agreement between mortgagees

  • A senior mortgagee can agree to subordinate its interest to a junior interest.

4) Mortgage modifications

  • A senior mortgagee who enters into an agreement with the mortgagor/landowner to modify the mortgage by making it more burdensome subordinates its interest, but only as to the modification.
  • The original mortgage will otherwise remain superior.
  • Likewise, if a senior mortgagee releases a mortgage and, at the same time, replaces it with a new mortgage, the new mortgage retains the same priority as the former mortgage, except to the extent a change is materially prejudicial to a junior mortgage holder.

5) After-acquired property

  • A mortgagor/borrower may grant rights to property that they acquire in the future to a mortgagee/lender.
  • The mortgage must clearly state that it applies to after-acquired property.
  • Upon foreclosure, an interest in after-acquired property is junior to a purchase-money mortgage.
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23
Q

MORTGAGES > Equitable Redemption

A

Equitable Redemption — Period of time from Notice of Foreclosure until sale (of the property) that residents can pay off debt and keep property.

  • Can NEVER be waived! Public policy
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24
Q

MORTGAGES > Statutory Redemption

A

Statutory Redemption — Period of time from Sale until whatever the statute provides that residents can pay off debt and still keep property.

  • Not automatic, by statute only
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25
Q

ADVERSE POSSESION
(ECHO)

A

WHO HAS TITLE?

Stay on property so long, and you get TITLE

  • Until the person acquires title, the person is a trespasser.
  • When a person acquires title by adverse possession, the new title relates back to the date of the person’s entry onto the property. There is no transfer of title from the former owner.
  • Property owned by the government cannot be adversely possessed.

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ELEMENTS (ECHO)

1) CONTINUOUS (for the statutory period)

The adverse possessor continuously uses the land for a statutorily prescribed amount of time.
Time begins running when the adverse possesor enters the land and they become the legal owner of the property by operation of law when the statute of limitations runs out of time.

  • The “continuous” requirement is not literal. Seasonal or infrequent use may suffice if the use is consistent with the type of property being possessed (e.g., a vacation home, farmland).
  • Tacking (privity requirement) - adverse possessor can tack on her predecessor’s time on the property to satisfy the statute of limitations. Must be in privity with the prior adverse possessor. Privity is an exchange of some sort between the adverse possessors.
  • Disabilities – The statute of limitations will not run against a true owner who has a disability at the time the adverse possession begins (e.g., infancy, insanity, or imprisonment).
  • Interruptions – A true owner can interrupt the adverse possession period by ejecting the adverse possessor. This will stop the adverse possession clock.

2) OPEN & NOTORIOUS
An adverse possessor’s use must be open and notorious.

  • Use must be such that it would put a reasonable true owner on notice of the adverse use.
  • The use cannot be hidden; the trespasser must use the property as if she was the true owner.

3) HOSTILE

“Hostile” does not mean unpleasant. Possession must be adverse to the owner’s interest. It is a claim of competing title. Not permissive use.

  • Majority rule (objective): Ignores the adverse possessor’s state of mind - adverse possessor objectively demonstrates an intent to claim the land.
  • Minority rule (subjective): Inquires into the adverse possessor’s state of mind
  • Good faith jurisdiction: Hostile if by mistake. they think the land is unowned or that they are the rightful owner.
  • Bad Faith jurisdiction: “Aggresive trespass.” They know that land is not theirs.

4) EXCLUSIVE

An adverse possessor cannot share possesion with the true owner.

  • If two people possess the property together, they acquire title as tenants in common.

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Scope of Possession

  • Adverse possession generally traces the legal boundaries of the property
  • Includes subsurface rights, unless those rights already belong to a third party
  • Easements can also be acquired by adverse possession (or prescription).

Exception—constructive adverse possession

  • Adverse possessor enters under color of title from an invalid instrument (e.g., fraudulent deed) and occupies a portion of the property described in the instrument. The adverse possessor is in actual possession of the occupied land and constructive possession of the remaining land described in the deed.
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26
Q

Common-Law Recording Rule

A

The baseline for recording problems is the common-law rule.

  • It follows the “first in
    time, first in right” principle
  • (i.e., under the common-law rule, the first grantee to receive a deed wins).

Note: Every state has a recording statute that modifies the common-law rule to give priority to certain deeds when there are competing claims to title.

Note: In the absence of a recording statute, the common-law rule controls.

27
Q

RECORDING STATUTES >
1) Who is Protected?
2) Who is Not Protected?
3) Types of Notice
4) Types of Recording Statutes

When is it relevant? When 1 owner sells/gifts/mortgages same peice of land to multiple people/entities

A

1) WHO IS PROTECTED?

  • Subsequent Purchasors —not donees.

2) Who is NOT Protected?

  • Grantees who acquire title by gift, intestacy ,or devise are NOT protected by recording acts.
  • policy behind recording acts is that we want to protect those who make economic investments by acquiring property, not people who just inherit

3) NOTICE

Actual— when the subsequent grantee has real, personal knowledge of a prior interest;

Constructive (i.e., record notice) — The fact that a deed has been recorded does not always mean that a purchaser will be charged with notice of it, needs to have been recorded in a fashion that a searcher could reasonably find it.

  • EXCEPTION: Wild deeds - A recorded deed that falls outside the chain of title is a “wild deed” that fails to give record notice to subsequent purchasers.
  • Example, O owns BlackAcre:
  • O to A - not recorded
  • A to B - B records (wild deed)
  • O to C - Even though B recorded, its a wild deed and thus C does not have notice. C can still be a BFP.

Inquiry — when a reasonable investigation would have disclosed the existence of prior claims. (2 scenarios)

  • i) Dude on the land: When there is someone else living on or using the land. had they visited the land, they would have discovered.
  • ii) Mentioned interest: When there is an interest mentioned in the deed to some other transaction; had the subsequent grantee inquired, he would have discovered the interest.

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1) Race Jurisdiction
2) Notice Jurisdiction
3) Race Notice Jurisdiction

28
Q

RECORDING STATUTES > Race Jurisdiction

A

RULE: First purchaser for value who records, wins!

  • even if the purchaser had notice of an earlier competing property interest. (Not a BFP)

Key language

  • “First recorded” or “First to record”
29
Q

RECORDING STATUTES > Notice Jurisdiction

Most Common (FL)

A

RULE: Last BFP with NO NOTICE, wins!

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BFP = 2 Elements “innocent purchasor”

1) Paid value for land

  • Release of existing debt
  • Substantial amount not grossly inadequate in relation to property interest’s value

No value

  • Security for existing debt (eg, judgment lien)
  • Nominal payment (eg, $1)
  • Recital of consideration in deed
  • Gift, devise, or inheritance

2) NO NOTICE of an earlier competing property interest

  • Actual Notice
  • Constructive (Record) Notice — Exception: Wild Deeds, Deed recorded late
  • Inquiry Notice

VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV

Key language

  • “In good faith” or “Without notice”

“Notice” Recording Act protects subsequent purchasers for value who lack notice of prior interests in the same property (i.e., bona fide purchasers)

Handout definition: A subsequent purchaser wins if she acquires without notice of a prior, unrecorded conveyance.

30
Q

RECORDING STATUTES >
Race Notice Jurisdiction

A

RULE: FIRST BFP who records, wins!

VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV

BFP = 2 Elements “innocent purchasor”

1) Paid value for land

  • Release of existing debt
  • Substantial amount not grossly inadequate in relation to property interest’s value

No value

  • Security for existing debt (eg, judgment lien)
  • Nominal payment (eg, $1)
  • Recital of consideration in deed
  • Gift, devise, or inheritance

2) No notice of earlier competing property interest

  • Actual Notice
  • Constructive (Record) Notice — Exception: Wild Deeds, Deed recorded late
  • Inquiry Notice

VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV

Key language

  • “In good faith” or “Without notice” and
  • “First duly recorded” or “First recorded”
31
Q

RECORDING STATUTES >
Shelter Rule
Estoppel by Deed

A

Shelter Rule
a person who receives a property interest from a BFP is entitled to the same protection under the recording act as the BFP

Example
Oliver sells Blackacre to Anna, who does not record. Later, Oliver sells Blackacre to Benny. Benny has no knowledge of the prior conveyance. Carter is interested in buying Blackacre from Benny, though Carter is aware of the prior transfer to Anna. Benny sells to Carter. The state is a “notice” state.

  • Does Carter have good title? YES.
  • Even though Carter had notice of the prior conveyance, Carter stands in Benny’s place, and Benny did not have notice of the conveyance to Anna.

Estoppel by Deed

  • Arises when a grantor conveys land the grantor does not own
  • If a grantor subsequently acquires title to the land, the grantor is estopped from trying to repossess on grounds that he didn’t have title when he made the original conveyance.
32
Q

EASEMENTS

A

Right held by one person to make use of another person’s land (Not about Title)

  • Servient Estate: Land burdened by the easement
  • Dominant Estate: Land benefited by the easement

Affirmative Easement: The holder has the right to do something on someone else’s property.

Negative Easement: The holder has the right to prevent someone from doing something on her land.

  • must be express; it cannot be created by
    implication because will rarely be created by circumstances
  • (almost gone with restrictive covenants)

Easement Appurtenant: The easement is tied to the use of the land.

  • An easement appurtenant is fully transferable; it is tied to the land, regardless of whether or not mentioned in conveyance

Easement in Gross: The easement benefits the holder personally

  • there is no dominant estate, only a servient estate.
  • courts allow the easement to be transferred if there is intent for it to be transferable.

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Duty to Maintain - Contribution

  • Owners of an easement have the right and the duty to maintain the easement unless otherwise agreed.
  • When an easement is shared, the owner who maintains or repairs the easement may seek contribution from (1) the other easement owners and (2) the servient-estate owner if he/she uses the easement.
33
Q

Easements > Creating an Easement

A

Express Easement – when it is affirmatively created by the parties in a writing that satisfies the requirements for a deed. (+ SOF)

1) By Grant

  • An easement by grant is created when the owner of the servient estate grants another person an easement in the servient estate.

2) By Reservation

  • An easement by reservation is created when a grantor conveys land but reserves an easement right in the land for the grantor’s use and benefit.
  • Eddie conveys Yellowacre to Sue. In the deed, Eddie “reserves the right to cross Yellowacre to reach the lake.”

VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV

Implied Easements(Easements by Operation of Law; Non-Express Easements)

  • An easement by implication is created by operation of law through factual circumstances rather than by written instrument.
  • Not subject to the Statute of Frauds
  • Not subject to recording statutes (unless the subsequent purchaser had notice of the easement)

Types of implied easements:

1) Easement by NECESSITY - occurs when, after property is severed, a portion of the property becomes landlocked.

  • “Necessity” in a strict sense
  • Ends when it is no longer necessary

Conditions that Must be Met

  • Common ownership: Dominant and servient estates were owned in common by one person; and
  • Necessity at severance: When the estates were severed into two separate estates, one of the properties became virtually useless without an easement.

2) Easement by IMPLICATION - Created by an existing use on a property. Common with division of property. Prior use before property divide.

Conditions that Must be Met

  • Common Ownership: A large estate owned by one owner
  • Use Before Severance: The owner of the large tract uses the land as if there’s an easement on it. (quasi-easement)
  • Use at Severance: Use must be continuous and apparent (not concealed) at the time of severance.
  • Reasonably Necessary: Use must be reasonably necessary to the dominant estate’s use and enjoyment. (lesser standard than “strictly” necessary)

3) Easement by PRESCRIPTION
Created by using land for “Statutory period of time.” It’s like acquiring an easement by adverse possession. (without exclusivity requirement)

  • Dont Confuse. Adverse possesion = Acquire Title (possesion).
  • Easement by Prescription = legal right to keep on using it (use).

4) Easement by ESTOPPEL

Creation

  • Permission: Starts with a permissive use (license)
  • Reliance: Continues when the second neighbor relies (reasonably and in good faith) on the first neighbor’s promise. (e.g., made improvements to the easement).
  • Permission withdrawn: Finally, the first neighbor withdraws permission.

Result: If reliance was detrimental to the second neighbor, the first neighbor is estopped from withdrawing permission, in effect creating an easement.

Because an easement is an interest in land, the Statute of Frauds applies. Must be memorialized in a writing that is signed by the grantor (the holder of the servient tenement)

  • UNLESS its duration is brief enough (less than a year) to be outside the coverage of a particular state’s Statute of Frauds.
34
Q

Easements > Scope of Easement

A

Scope of Easement

Express Easements – Determined by the terms of the easement when it was created

Ambiguous terms

  • If the terms are ambiguous, the court considers the intent of the original parties as to the purpose of the easement.

Changes in use

  • Changes in use of an easement are tested under a reasonableness standard. Presume the parties contemplated both its current use and its future use, which means the future use of an easement must be reasonably foreseeable.
  • Thus, an easement holder may increase the manner, frequency, or intensity of an easement’s use so long as that increase does not unreasonably damage or interfere with the use or enjoyment of the servient estate.

Trespass

  • If the use exceeds the scope, the dominant tenant is tresspassing on the servient estate.

Implied Easements – Determined by the nature of the prior use or necessity

35
Q

Easements > Terminating an Easement

A

Once an easement is created it lasts FOREVER unless terminated

1) Release

  • The holder of the easement expressly releases it.
  • Must be in writing

2) Merger

  • Owner of the easement acquires fee title to the servient estate.
  • The easement merges into the title.

3) Abandonment

  • Non-use, AND
  • Act demonstrating an intent to abandon.

4) Prescription

  • The holder fails to protect against the servient estate owner’s interference for the statutory period. (adverse possesion-like)
  • interference that is continuous, actual, open, and hostile for a specific period

5) Sale to a Purchasor

6) Estoppel

  • The servient owner detrimentally relies on statements or conduct of the easement holder that the easement is abandoned.

7) End of Necessity

  • An easement by necessity lasts as long as the easement is needed
  • If it is no longer necessary, the easement ends.
36
Q

RIGHTS IN LAND > License

A

NOT AN EASEMENT
License — Permission to enter and use another’s land for specific purpose, REVOCABLE

  • most limiited weakest right in land use

Creation

  • Orally, in writing, or by another act demonstrating licensor’s intent to create license

Termination

  • At any time upon revocation by licensor or
  • Automatically upon (1) death of licensor or licensee or (2) conveyance of licensed property,
  • UNLESS
  • the licensee detrimentally relied on it or the license is coupled with an interest. (Easement by Estoppel)
37
Q

RIGHTS IN LAND > Profit

A

NOT AN EASEMENT
Profit — The right to enter land to TAKE something (extract) off the land of another

38
Q

RIGHTS IN LAND > Covenants (distinguished from equitable servitude)

A

Covenants: A PROMISE concerning the use of the land that runs to successors to the promise.

  • The remedy for a breach of a real covenant is DAMGES ($)

When an agreement binds a successor, it “runs with the land.”

Requirements to Run With the Land
(To bind a successor)

1) In Writing

  • Covenant is in a writing that satisfies the statute of frauds

2) Intent

  • promising parties intend for the covenant to run to their successors in interest (deeds say “the owners, their heirs, and their assigns”)

3) “Touch and Concern” the land
(Not heavily tested)

Covenant relates to the use, enjoyment, or occupation of the land

4) Notice

  • Person to be bound had notice of the covenant (actual or constructive/ Inquiry notice may suffice for equitable servitude)

5) Privity (Heavily Tested)

HORIZONTAL PRIVITY – promising parties simultaneously transfer the land and create the covenant in the same instrument (e.g., the deed).

VERTICAL PRIVITY – successors have an unbroken chain of ownership from the original parties.

  • Strict Vertical Privity: successor must take the original party’s ENTIRE interest. (FSA > FSA)
  • Relaxed Vertical Privity: the successor need only take an interest that is CARVED OUT of the original party’s estate. (FSA > FSD)

RULE: In order to run the (burden/benefit) of the covenant to the succcesor, they need:

Burden (bind)

  • Horizontal privity AND Strict Vertical privity

Benefit (ability to enforce)

  • Relaxed vertical privity

The remedy for a breach of a real covenant is DAMGES ($)*

  • if you dont want $ damages but just want an injunction, look for equitable servitude.
39
Q

RIGHTS IN LAND > Equitable Servitude

A

“I don’t want damages, but I want an INJUNCTION”

Another way to bind a successor to an original party’s promise.

  • Operates like a real covenant but with easier requirements; No privity requirement.

To bind a successor:

  • In Writing - Exception (Implied Reciprocal Servitude)
  • Intent - Intent to run with Land. Intent for the servitude to bind their successors in interest “heirs and assigns”
  • Touch and concern - Promise inherently relates to the land or the manner it is used, or promise affects both parties in their capacity as owners of the land.
  • Notice - at least inquiry

Implied Reciprocal Servitude
It is a kind of equitable servitude that is implied and NEED NOT BE IN WRITING. Usually comes up in planned communities (e.g., condo, subdivision);

  • Developer must intend to create a covenant (i.e.,promise) on all plots in the subdivision;
  • Promises must be reciprocal (i.e.,benefits and burdens each and every parcel equally);
  • Must be restrictive rather than positive (i.e.,it must be a restriction on the owner’s use);
  • A successor must be on notice of the restriction (at least INQUIRY notice); and
  • Must be a COMMON PLAN OR SCHEME

(if the common scheme arose after some of the lots were already sold, then the previously sold lots will not be incorporated into the common scheme or subject to the implied equitable servitude)

To prove there is a common plan, look for:

  • A (recorded) map of the community showing the common scheme;
  • Marketing or advertising of the community;
  • Oral or written mention that the lots are burdened by common restriction.

Changed Circumstances Doctrine

Look for situations where the restriction no longer makes sense due to drastic changes inside the community area since the restriction was put in place.

  • Critical question: Does the property subject to the restriction still retain some benefit from the restriction?

Equitable Defenses

  • unclean hands (the plaintiff not acting in good faith) and laches (unreasonable delay)

Terminates as an easement does (i.e., merger, release, etc.)

The benefit of enforcing an equitable servitude is held only by the original parties and their successors in interest.

40
Q

Equitable Servitude > Common Interest Communities

A

Common Interest Communities

Real estate development in which individual units/lots are burdened by a covenant to pay dues to an association that provide services like maintaining grounds, providing facilities, etc. and enforces the covenants: The association is the “heavy” when your neighbor breaks the rules.

3 TYPES:

  • Owners’ Associations: Where property owners belong and pay dues to an association or board;
  • Condominiums: Where individual units are owned outright, but common are as are owned collectively as tenants in common;
  • Cooperatives: Property is owned by a corporation made up of residents/shareholders that lease individual units to shareholders (residents).

VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV
GOVERNANCE

Declaration: The governing documents that outline the controlling covenants and restrictions, as well as the particulars about the association or board.

Powers: The board has general powers to manage the common property and administer the residents. For example:

  • Assessments/fees;
  • Manage and maintain the common property (e.g., clubhouse, gym);
  • Enforce rules;
  • Create new rules.
  • Basic test: A new rule must be reasonably related to further a legitimate purpose of the association (think: rational basis test).

Duties To the community: The association must deal fairly with members of the community.

  • Good faith;
  • prudence;
  • Ordinary care;
  • Business Judgment Rule controls (the board is shielded from honest but mistaken business
    decisions).
41
Q

FEE SIMPLE v. DEFEASIBLE FEE

A

1) Fee simple (absolute) is absolute ownership of property for a potentially infinite duration and has no future interest. It is absolute ownership of potentially infinite duration. It is “freely alienable” because it is able to be transferred inter vivos, by will, or intestacy without restriction. A fee simple absolute has no accompanying future interest.

  • conveyances that are ambiguous (e.g., “to B”) are considered fee simple by default.
  • Language that limits only the purpose of the transfer (e.g., “for the purpose of”) creates an FSA.

2) A defeasible fee is ownership of potentially infinite duration. But, a defeasible fee can be terminated by the occurrence of a stated event. Defeasible fees are limited by specific durational or conditional language (e.g., “so long as,” “but if”). Three defeasible fee simples are

  • (i) fee simple determinable,
  • (ii) fee simple subject to a condition subsequent, and
  • (iii) fee simple subject to an executory interest.

A defeasible fee is freely alienable by the owner during his life, and upon his death, it is devisable (i.e., transferable by will) and descendible (i.e., transferable by intestacy).

42
Q

PRESENT POSSESSORY ESTATES > Fee Simple Absolute

A

Fee Simple Absolute (FSA) — Owns 100% for all time (forever)

  • LARGEST possessory estate
  • Passes to heirs and then to their heirs and then to their heirs. Nothing stopping it.
  • No future interests associated with a fee simple. You have the whole wheel of cheese.

Default Estate

  • Fee simple absolute is the default estate; there is a default presumption that the grantor conveys the most that she has unless they limit/tell us otherwise.
  • Language that limits only the purpose of the transfer (e.g., “for the purpose of”) creates an FSA. (e.g., “for the purpose of”)
  • Ambiguous grants create a fee simple (“to B”)

Magic Words

  • “O to A” and “O to A and his/her heirs”

Fee Simple/Fee Simple Absolute = Same thing

43
Q

PRESENT ESTATES > Defeasible Fees

A

Defeasible Fee — A defeasible fee is ownership of potentially infinite duration. But, a defeasible fee can be terminated by the occurrence of a stated event. Defeasible fees are limited by specific durational or conditional language (e.g., “so long as,” “but if”).

Types of Defeasible Fees

  • Fee Simple Determinable
  • Fee Simple Subject to Condition Subsequent
  • Fee Simple Subject to an Executory Interest

Alienable

  • A defeasible fee is freely alienable by the owner during his life, and upon his death, it is devisable (i.e., transferable by will) and descendible (i.e., transferable by intestacy).
44
Q

PRESENT POSSESSORY ESTATES > Fee Simple Determinable

A

Fee Simple Determinable — Fee Simple that is limited by DURATIONAL language. A FSD automatically terminates on the happening of a stated event and reverts back to the grantor.

Durational language

  • so long as/as long as
  • while/during/until
  • Ex: O conveys “To A (fee simple) SO LONG AS (determinable) A uses the property for agricultural purposes.

FUTURE INTEREST (Who has it?)

GRANTOR - POSSIBILITY OF REVERTER

  • Reverter — Interest reverts back to grantor AUTOMATICALLY as soon as the period ends (e.g., when the land is no longer used as a farm),

Third Party - Executory Interest

  • Upon the occurrence of the stated event, the passage of the estate is automatic.

Durational—Determinable

45
Q

PRESENT POSSESSORY ESTATES > Fee Simple Subject to Condition Subsequent

A

Fee Simple Subject to Condition Subsequent — a present fee simple that is limited in duration by specific conditional language (e.g., “provided that,” “on condition that,” “but if”). Upon the occurrence of the condition, the GRANTOR (or his successor interest) has the right to enter to terminate this estate. NOT AUTOMATIC.

FUTURE INTERESTS - *GRANTOR (RIGHT OF RE-ENTRY)

  • Right of Re-Entry — NOT AUTOMATIC, required to take action
  • Grantor can enter and terminate the estate by affirmatively demonstrating an intent to terminate. Until then, grantee’s ownership interest is not terminated.
  • The right of re-entry is freely alienable during life, and it is devisable by will, or, alternatively, descendible through intestate succession upon death.
46
Q

PRESENT POSSESSORY ESTATES > Fee Simple Subject to Executory Interest

A

Fee Simple Subject to Executory Interest — A fee simple estate that is limited by specific conditional language (e.g., “provided that,” “on condition that,” “but if”), such that, upon the occurrence of the specified event or condition, title will automatically pass to a THIRD PARTY (i.e., someone other than the grantor - NO right of re rentry)

FUTURE INTEREST - Third Party (Executory Interest)

2 types of executory interests:

Springing executory interest: Divests the Grantor (Grantor > Executor)

Shifting executory interest: Divests a prior Grantee (Grantee > Executor)

executor interes (jerks)
remainder interests (patiently waits)

47
Q

Special Cases >
1) Doctrine of Worthier Title
2) Rule in Shelly’s Case

A

1) Doctrine of Worthier Title – Prevents against a grantor from creating a remainder in the grantor’s heirs
* Creates a presumption of a REVERSION to the grantor
* Reasoning: Needless extra language. Same effect as just giving a Life Estate.

Example:

Oliver conveys “to Anna for life, then to my heirs.”

  • OLIVER retains a REVERSION

2) Rule in Shelly’s Case – Prevents against a grantor from creating a remainder in the grantee’s heirs.

  • Uses the doctrine of merger to create a FEE SIMPLE
  • Reasoning: Needless extra language. Same effect as just giving Fee Simple.

Example

*Oliver conveys “to Anna for life, then to Anna’s heirs.”

  • What estate does Anna have under the Rule in Shelley’s case? Fee Simple (Absolute here)
48
Q

PRESENT POSSESSORY ESTATES >
1) Life Estate
2) Future Interests
3) Life Tenant Duties

A

Life Estate — “for life” Ownership limited in duration by a LIFE. Estate that will end upon the death of the measuring life.

  • Not inheritable, cant devise by will. Ends naturally at death.

Defeasible life estate - is a present possessory interest that terminates upon the end of the measuring life or the happening of a stated event.

  • If title passes to someone other than the grantor when the present interest terminates, then the estate is followed by a remainder and an executory interest.

FUTURE INTEREST

1) GRANTORREVERSION

  • possession of the land goes back to the grantor after the life estate ends

2) THIRD PARTYREMAINDER, (vested or contingent)

VESTED remainder — nothing can stop it.

To be vested, need:

  • (i) ascertainable grantee and
  • (ii) no condition precedent
  • Note: If the holder of a vested remainder dies, the interest passes to the holder’s heirs.

CONTINGENT remainder — Vesting is contingent on something happening

  • If the contingent remainder does not vest—i.e., satisfy (i) and (ii)—before it becomes possesory, the Grantor has a reversion.

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Life Tenant Duties

1) Duty to pay ordinary taxes/ on the real property, but only to the extent that the life tenant receives a financial benefit from the property. The financial benefit is determined differently depending on whether the life tenant:

  • occupies the property – fair market rental value of the property, or
  • does not occupy the property – income derived from the land

2) duty to prevent waste - affirmative waste (ie, voluntary waste) permissive waste and ameliorative waste

3) duty to make ordinary repairs - to preserve property

49
Q

FUTURE INTERESTS >
Class Gifts
(Vested Remainder SUBJECT TO OPEN)

A

Class Gifts —
1) Vested Remainder SUBJECT TO OPEN

(i) Vested remainder in a class gift (class of people); and
(ii) class memberhsip is unknown.

  • RULE: At least one person in the class must be vested for it to be vested subject to open;
  • if no one in the class has vested yet, the remainder is contingent.
  • When all members of a class are identified, the class is closed.

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RAP applies

Rule of Convenience: A class-closing mechanism to avoid application of RAP to a class gift.

  • If the grant does not have an express closing date, the Rule of Convenience closes the class when any member of the class becomes entitled to immediate possesion.

Example

  • Oliver conveys “to Anna for life, then to Ben’s children.” Ben has one child.
  • When will this class close under the Rule of Convenience? On Anna’s death.

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2) Vested remainder subject to complete divestment

  • A vested remainder subject to divestment indicates that the occurrence of a condition subsequent will completely divest the remainder interest.
50
Q

FUTURE INTERESTS > Executory Interest

A

Subject to the Rule Against Perpetuities (“RAP”)
Executory Interests: Future interest that cuts short (i.e., divests) a prior vested interest

2 TYPES

Springing executory interest: Divests the Grantor (Grantor > Executor)

  • Ex: Oliver conveys Blackacre “to Anna for life, then to Ben one year after Anna’s death.”
  • reverts to Oliver at Anna’s death, then Ben divests Oliver’s (grantor) interest one year later.
  • Ex: Oliver conveys Blackacre “to Anna after she is admitted to the bar.”

Shifting executory interest: Divests a prior Grantee (Grantee > Executor)

  • Ex: Oliver conveys Blackacre “to Anna, but if the land is used for commercial purposes, to Ben.”
  • Anna has a Fee Simple Subject to Executory Interest
  • If land used for commercial purposes, Ben divests Anna’s (grantee) interest
51
Q

FUTURE INTERESTS > Rule Against Perpetuity

A

Life plus 21 yrs Test: “Is it possible for [condition] more than 21 years after [validating life]’s death?”

RAP is not about whether an interest vests or fails. It is about whether we will know if it vests or fails within RAP period (a life plus 21 years). Cannot have uncertainty.

Method—When, What, Who?

1) When: Identifying when the interests are created

  • Inter vivos transfers: At time of the grant
  • Devise (will): At testator’s death, not when the will is drafted

2) What: Determine if interests created are subject to RAP

RAP applies to:

  • contingent remainders
  • executory interests
  • class gifts (subject to open), if not closed by rule of convenience

3) Who: Identify the relevant and, if applicable, validating lives

(When testing, always kill and reproduce. Anyone can die the next day, assume any living person, regardless of age, will reproduce)

Relevant life: Person who affects vesting, mentioned or implied by the grant (e.g., prior life tenant, the parent where a conveyance is made to a child)

Validating life: Person who tells us whether or not the interest vests or fails within the perpetuities period (validating lifetime plus 21 years) Ask yourself: Whens the LAST moment in time we will know whether it vests or fails?

  • Must have been alive when the interests were created;
  • Can validate her own interest;
  • If no validating life, then the interest is void and we strike it from the grant; if there is a validating life, the interest is good.

RAP VIOLATIONS

  • Effect of violation: We strike out the violating interest, as if the interest was never created in the first place.

Test: “Is it possible for [condition] more than 21 years after [validating life]’s death?”

Reproduce and Kill

  • Remember: Property law assumes that anyone who is alive can reproduce, have more children. Living people have the nasty habit of breeding.
  • Property law assume anyone can die the next day

Examples
1) Oliver conveys “to Anna for life, then to Anna’s first child who reaches the age of 22.”

  • This conveyance violates RAP. (violates if you can tell a story where it can be outside a life + 21 years)
  • It is a contingent remainder, and possible for the contingent remainder (in Anna’s first child) to vest more than 21 years after Anna’s life. (You can make a story where Anna has a child immediately and then dies right after)
  • Anna’s first child, if not born yet, can’t be a validating life, and even if alive, is not a validating life because the child could die.

2) Oliver conveys, “to Anna so long as the property is used as a farm, then to Ben.”

  • Anna has a fee simple subject to an executory interest and Ben has an executory interest.
  • This conveyance violates RAP. It is possible that Ben’s executory interest will vest more than 21 years after Anna’s or Ben’s death.
  • Even if Anna dies, the property can continue to be used as a farm by her heirs for way more than 21 years.

3) Oliver conveys “to my grandchildren who reach 21.” Oliver has two children, Anna and Ben, and three grandchildren under the age of 21.

  • This conveyance violates RAP.
  • It is possible that Oliver could have another child—call her C—who gives birth to a grandchild after Oliver, Anna, and Ben have died. This grandchild will not reach age 21 until more than 21 years after the deaths of the measuring lives (C is not a validating life because she was not in existence when the interest was created).
  • (assume any living person, regardless of age, will reproduce)

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EXCEPTIONS TO RAP

  • Charity to Charity
  • Options held by current tenant to purchase a fee interest in the leasehold property
  • Options (or right of first refusal) in a commercial transaction

Practical tension:

  • Parents want to keep property in the family but do not trust their children
  • v.
  • courts’ unease about uncertainty

RAP prevents remote vesting. (very far into the future)

  • Testing for certainty
  • Operates like a statute of limitations for contingent future interests.

Why 21 years?

  • Approximately 2 generations—a life plus 21 years;
  • Beyond that, we can’t say what will happen.
  • Law says “you can tie up your property for 2 generations after that, we need to know whether it will vest or fail”
52
Q

Rules against Perpetuities > Class Gifts (ALL OR NOTHING RULE)

A

(RAP > Class Gifts)
“ALL OR NOTHING RULE”

  • If even one potential person could throetically join the class beyond the perpetuities period, the entire class gift is void.

example

Oliver conveys “to Anna for life, then to her children who reach 25.” At the time of the conveyance, Anna’s son Ben is 26 and her daughter Carmen is 18.

  • The Gift does NOT survive RAP
  • Remember: Living people have the nasty habit of breeding. Property law assumes that anyone who is alive can still have children.
  • Anna could have another kid (call her Dana) after the conveyance. Dana can’t be a validating life. Dana could vest more than 21 years after Anna, Ben, and Carmen’s death.

ALL OR NOTHING DOESN’T APPLY IN 2 SCENARIOS:

  • Transfers of a specific dollar amount to each class member
  • Transfers to a subclass that vests at a specific time

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Rule of Convenience
A class-closing mechanism to save a class from being invalidating under RAP.

  • For purposes of avoiding RAP, the class closes as soon as any member of the class becomes entitled to immediate possesion.
53
Q

Spotting “Waste” Problems

A

Comes into play when more than one party has an interest in the same piece of real property

  • estates and future interest holders
  • Landlord v. tenant;
  • Co-tenant out of possession v. tenant in possession (concurrent estates);
  • Mortgagee (bank/lender) v. mortgagor (borrower). A mortgagor in possession of the mortgaged property has a duty not to commit waste that would impair the mortgagee’s security interest in that property. If the mortgagor breaches this duty, the mortgagee can recover damages for the impairment.

3 kinds of Waste:

1) Affirmative waste

  • Waste caused by voluntary conduct, which causes a decrease in value.

2) Permissive Waste

  • Waste caused by neglect toward the property, which causes a decrease in value.

3) Ameliorative waste:

  • Special situation where a life tenant or other person in possession changes the use of the property and actually increases the value of the property.
54
Q

LANDLORD — TENANT > Types of Tenancies

A

1) Tenancy for Years — Measured by any FIXED amount of time. It need not be measured in years. It can be for any length of time.

Creation – AGREEMENT by the landlord and the tenant

  • If the term is longer than one year, must be signed and in writing (to satisfy the Statute of Frauds)

Termination – occurs AUTOMATICALLY upon the expiration of the term. (no notice required, unless lease requires it) Can terminate before term is over if:

  • Tenant surrenders the lease
  • The tenant or the landlord commits a material breach of the lease (e.g., the tenant fails to pay rent).

2) Periodic Tenancy — Estate that is REPETITIVE and ongoing for a set period of time (month-to-month, year-to-year) Renews automatically at the end of each period until one party gives proper notice of termination

  • Presumed when lease has no specified termination date

Creation – Parties must INTEND to create a periodic tenancy. Intent can be:

  • express (a signed lease) or
  • implied (payment of rent, operation of law [eg, holdover tenant])

Termination – Renews automatically until proper NOTICE is given (written notice before start of last term)

  • Proper notice means the terminating party gives written notice before the start of what will be the last term.
  • Notice is effective on the last day of the period.
  • Larry leased Blackacre to Tara on a month-to-month basis. Tara gives notice of termination on February 15. The termination becomes effective March 31.

3) Tenancy at Will — May be terminated by either landlord or tenant at any time, for any reason. Does not have a specific term and continues so long as the landlord and the tenant desire.

Creation – Can be created by express agreement or by implication

Termination – Can be terminated by either party without notice. (or by death of either party)

  • If the agreement gives only the landlord the right to terminate at will, the tenant ALSO gets the right to terminate at will by implication (unconscionable - unequal bargaining power)
  • If the agreement gives only the tenant the right to terminate at will, the landlord is NOT given the right to terminate at will

Death of either party – terminates the tenancy at will

  • this is not true for the tenancy for years or the periodic tenancy.

Tenancy at Sufferance — Created when a tenant holds over (stays) after the lease has ended

  • Landlord is NOT required to give the tenant notice to vacate the premises before taking steps to recover possession of the property

Creation – by ACTIONS of the tenant alone

Termination – 3 ways to terminate

  • Tenant voluntarily leaves
  • Landlord evicts the tenant
  • Landlord re-rent to the tenant
55
Q

LANDLORD — TENANT > Duties

A

Landlord:

1) Duty to Mitigate Damages (Residential ONLY) - reasonable efforts to re-rent, LL entitled to the difference between the original rent and the rent received from the replacement tenant.

  • If the landlord does not make diligent efforts to mitigate, the tenant is relieved from the obligation to continue paying rent.
  • The landlord does not have to accept an unacceptable replacement tenant.

2) Holdover Tenant – can evict holdover tenant or can re-rent, treating the holdover tenant as a periodic tenant.

  • The landlord will continue the relationship by accepting rent (amount under the old lease is the amount due)
  • Exception: The landlord can impose a higher rent if the landlord had informed thetenant of the increase prior the expiration of the old lease.

3) Deliver physical possesion of property on 1st day of lease term. Legal possesion not enough.

4) Conditions of Leased Premises (Quiet Enjoyment + Habitability)

  • i) Quiet Enjoyment is violated when the landlord, or someone connected to the landlord, renders the premises unsuitable for the intended purpose. The landlord must control:
  • common areas (lobby, hallway, or laundry room)
  • nuisance-like behavior of other tenants
  • ii) Habitable Premises (Residential only)

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Tenant:

1) DUTY TO PAY RENT - can be suspended if

(i) premises are destroyed (not by tenant)
(ii) Patrial or complete eviction (partial: portion of the property)
(iii) Landlord materially breaches Lease (Implied Covenant of Quiet Enjoyment + Warranty of Habitability)

a) IMPLIED COVENANT OF QUIET ENJOYMENT - (Commercial AND Residential)

Landlord assures the tenant that the premises are wholly and substantially suitable for the tenants intended purpose

Elements: Constructive Eviction > Remedy - Withhold Payment

  • Premises were unusable for their intended purposes (i.e., breach of the covenant of quiet enjoyment);
  • The tenant notifies the landlord of the problem;
  • The landlord does not correct the problem; and
  • The tenant vacates the premises after a
    reasonable amount of time
    has passed.

b) IMPLIED WARRANTY OF HABITABILITY - (Residential ONLY - cannot wait)

The landlord has an obligation to maintain the property such that it is suitable for residential use. We are concerned conditions that threaten the tenant’s health and safety (make repairs, make safe, a/c, mold, health). The landlord’s failure to comply with applicable housing codes constitutes evidence of a breach;

Tenant’s Remedies – If the premises are not habitable, then the tenant may choose to:
1. Refuse to pay rent
2. Remedy the defect and offset the cost against rent
3. Defend against eviction

2) DUTY TO AVOID WASTE - implied in lease

  • The tenant has a duty not to commit affirmative (voluntary) waste or permissive (neglectful) waste
  • Damaging/reducing the value of the property

Duty to Repair - LL

  • In a residential lease, the Landlord is presumed to be responsible for repairs.
  • The tenant must notify the landlord of any needed repairs.
  • In a commercial lease, the landlord can place the duty to repair on the tenant.

Increase Value

  • A tenant may make changes to the property that increase the property’s value (“ameliorative waste”).
  • Landlords usually require permission before a tenant can make the change and can put a provision in the lease prohibiting the tenant from making improvements to the property.
56
Q

LANDLORD — TENANT >
Sublease v. Assignment

A

RENT PAYMENT

1) Sublease — Transfer for less than the entire duration of of T1’s lease

  • Original Tenant (T1) remains primarily liable for rent payment.

2) Assignment — Complete transfer of T1’s remaining term

  • New Tenant (T2) becomes primarily liable for rent payment. (privity of estate)
  • However, Landlord can still come for (T1) unless they executed a novation.

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Permission to Assign/Sublease

Silent Lease:

  • Tenant may FREELY assign/sublet

Permission: If the lease requires the landlord’s permission to transfer

  • Majority rule: A landlord may deny permission to a transfer only for a comercially reasonable reason
  • Minority rule: A landlord may deny permission at their discretion

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Transferring a landlord’s interest

Unless the lease states otherwise, a landlord may assign his/her rights under the lease to a third party (i.e., assignee-landlord) without the tenant’s consent. The new landlord is bound by terms of the existing lease and cannot change the terms of the existing lease without the tenant’s permission.

Lease covenants:

  • The new assignee-landlord can enforce covenants (i.e., promises) in the lease that run with the land.
  • Even if the intent to bind successors in interest is not explicitly stated in the lease, it is generally presumed when the covenant touches and concerns the land.

  • sublease: give away portion of your term
  • assignment: Give away rest and reaminder of lease term
57
Q

LANDLORD — TENANT >
Tort Liability

A

1) Tenant owes a duty of reasonable care to invitees, licensees, and foreseeable trespassers.

2) Landlord - Duty owed to invitees, licensees, and foreseeable trespassers:

Under Common Law

  • Responsible in negligence for latent (hidden) defects about which the tenant has not been warned
  • Responsible for faulty repairs completed by the landlord (or the landlord’s agent) negligently
  • Responsible for negligence that causes injuries in common areas of the property.

Modern Trend: The landlord owes a duty of reasonable care

58
Q

LANDLORD — TENANT > Fixtures

A

Fixtures: Chattel that, by removing them, you would damage property
* SO connected to the structure, SO built in to the foundation
* Never infer damage to the property
Rule: CAN’T REMOVE

59
Q

Special Issues > The Fair Housing Act (FHA)

A

The Fair Housing Act (FHA) prohibits DISCRIMINATION in the sale, rental, and financing of dwellings (homes, apartments, etc.). It also prohibits advertising that states a discriminatory preference.

Protected Traits: race, color, religion, national origin, sex,
disability, and familial status

  • Sex has now been interpreted to include sexual orientation and gender identity.
  • Familial status means families that have children under 18 or someone who is pregnant
  • Disability provision mandates reasonable accommodations for persons with disabilities (e.g., ramp, elevator, etc.)

What’s prohibited?

  • Stating a discriminatory preference in an advertisement.
  • Refusing to rent, sell, or finance a dwelling;
  • Requiring different rents;
  • Falsely denying that a unit is available;
  • Providing different services to facilities; (exception: reasonable accommodation for disabilities)

Causation: Prohibited behavior must be linked to the protected basis

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There are 3 EXEMPTIONS from the FHA:

  • 1) Single-family housing that is sold or rented WITHOUT a Broker
  • 2) Owner occupied buildings with less than 5 living units.
  • 3) Religious organizations and private clubs.
60
Q

Special Issues > Conflict of Laws

A

Basic Rule: In cases about property, the controlling law is based upon where the property is located

  • property dispute that involves more than one state (e.g., the parties to the suit are in different states).

When do you care about this? In many testable issues involving property:

  • Foreclosure;
  • Land contract dispute;
  • Equitable interests (e.g., trust property);
  • Intestate succession;
  • Interpreting conveyances.

When the basic rule DOESN’T apply:

  • If the instrument in question designates an applicable jurisdiction;
  • In cases involving marriage, specifically with respect to classifying property as marital or separate, the domicile of the party may override
  • In mortgage cases, where the mortgage documents require repayment to be made in another state.
61
Q

LAND USE > Zoning Basics

A

State and local governments may regulate the use of land through zoning laws. (for protection and safety)

  • States have authority to zone through police powers.
  • Local governments get power to zone through specific enabling acts.

Objective: Segregate incompatable uses from being developed in the same area (e.g., residential v. commercial and industrial)

  • Cumulative zoning: The traditional approach in which residential use is permitted everywhere, commercial use is restricted to some areas, and industrial use is allowed in the fewest areas.
  • Mutually exclusive zoning: Some jurisdictions have developed an approach where only one type of use is permitted by zone.

Nonconforming Uses
Two situations:
1. Existing Nonconforming Properties

NOT DONE–LOOK TO HANDOUT

62
Q

Water Rights

A

1) Riparian Rights

  • Doctrine of riparian rights holds that land owners who border a waterway own the rights to the waterway. The right depends upon whether the landowner is located near the water.
  • Riparians share the right to reasonable use of the water, sucht hat one riparian is liable to another for interference with the other’s use.

2) Prior Appropriation

  • First in time, first in right: The first person to use the water, regardless of where their land is located, has the rights to the water.
  • Beneficial use: In a prior appropriation jurisdiction, the user must put the water to a beneficial use. Any productive use satisfies this standard.
63
Q

Support Rights

A

1) Lateral Support Rights

A neighboring landowner cannot excavate so as to cause a cave in (i.e., subsidence) on an adjacent owner’s land.

Applicable standards:
* Did the neighbor’s buildings (structures) contribute to the cave in? If so, the standard to apply to the one excavating is negligence.
* What if the neighbor’s buildings did not contribute to cave in? The standard to apply is strict liability.

2) Subjacent Support

  • Think mineral rights.
  • The right to subjacent support (i.e., support from beneath the surface of the land) arises when the owner of land grants the right to mine on his land to a third party.
  • The owner of the mineral rights is strictly liable for any failure to support the land and any buildings on the land at the time the rights were conveyed.
  • The owner is liable only for negligence for damage to any improvements built after the conveyance of the rights.