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1 Click your mouse anywhere on the screen to advance the text in each slide. After the starburst appears, click a blue triangle to move to the next slide.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Click your mouse anywhere on the screen to advance the text in each slide. After the starburst appears, click a blue triangle to move to the next slide."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Click your mouse anywhere on the screen to advance the text in each slide. After the starburst appears, click a blue triangle to move to the next slide or previous slide.

2 2 Quote of the Day “It is a comfortable feeling to know that you stand on your own ground. Land is about the only thing that can’t fly away.” Anthony Trollope, English author

3 3 Nature of Real Property  The grantor is the conveyor of property; the grantee is the one receiving it.  Real property includes: Land Buildings Subsurface Rights Air Rights Plant Life Fixtures --an object considered to be a permanent part of the property.

4 4 Estates in Real Property  Rights in real estate usage and ownership vary from unrestricted use and right to sell, to a lesser right of usage, but not the right to transfer it.  The rights that someone can hold are called estates, or interests.

5 5 Freehold Estates  The owner of a freehold estate has the present right to possess the property and to use it in any lawful way.  A fee simple absolute provides the owner with the greatest control.  A fee simple defeasible may terminate upon the occurrence of some event.  A life estate is an estate for the life of some named person.

6 6 Non-Freehold Estates  Is actually a lease, where the owner permits someone to use and possess the property.

7 7 Concurrent Estates  A concurrent estate is when two or more own property at the same time. Tenancy in Common – two or more people own the property, each with the right to convey her interests or to pass it down to her heirs. A joint tenancy includes the right of survivorship  All co-tenants have an absolute right to partition (division of property).

8 8 Types of Estates in Marriage  Tenancy by the Entirety – form of ownership in more than half the states. The husband and wife each own the entire property, and they both have a right of survivorship.  Community Property – form of ownership in nine states. Property brought to the marriage or given to one spouse may remain individually owned, called separate property. Income or assets earned during the marriage is community property, which must be equally shared.

9 9 Condominiums and Cooperatives  In a condominium, the owner of the apartment typically has a fee simple absolute in his particular unit.  In a cooperative, the residents generally do not own their particular unit.

10 10 Future Interests  Interests that can be sold now, but do not convey possession; this ability to possess may or may not develop later. Reversion – the coveyor of a life estate in property regains possession after the life tenant dies. Remainder – a named, third person, gains possession of a property after a life tenant dies. Possibility of a Reverter – if the conveyor puts a condition on the possession of the property, it reverts to the conveyer if/when the condition is no longer met.

11 11 Nonpossessory Interests  An easement gives one person the right to enter land belonging to another and make a limited use of it, without taking anything away. An easement can be created when the landowner expressly grants it, when he implies it (such as in granting permission to access an area accessible only by crossing your land), or by necessity (when there is no other way to reach the property.)

12 12 Easements, (cont’d)  Easement by Prescription An easement by prescription happens when someone makes use of someone else’s property openly, without permission and for the number of years determined by local statute. If the owner does not stop the unauthorized use, the user is granted an easement by prescription.

13 13 Nonpossessory Interests (cont'd)  A profit gives one person the right to enter land belonging to another and take something away.  A license given the holder temporary permission to enter upon another’s property.  A mortgage is a security interest in real property, given to the institution loaning a buyer the money to buy real estate.

14 14 Sale of Real Property  Seller’s Obligation Concerning Property Most states now impose an implied warranty of habitability on a builder who sells a new home. The seller of a home must disclose facts that a buyer does not know and cannot readily observe, if they materially affect the property’s value.

15 15 Sales Contracts and Title Examination  The Statute of Frauds requires that the agreement to sell real property must be in writing. Must contain names of all parties, precise description of property, price and signatures.  Once an agreement is made, the buyer’s lawyer makes a title search, to ensure that the seller has valid title to the property.

16 16 Closing and Deeds  A general warranty deed normally contains the covenants of: Seisin –the seller owns the property Right to Convey – the seller has the right to sell this property (No) Encumbrances – property is free of easements, profits, mortgages, etc. Quiet Enjoyment – no other person can lawfully claim the property Warranty – seller agrees to defend the grantee if a third party makes a claim

17 17 Other Deeds  A special warranty deed normally contains the same covenants as a general warranty deed, but only applies against problems that arose while the grantor owned the land, not before.  A quitclaim deed warrants nothing. The grantor simply transfers whatever right, title or interest he has.

18 18 Recording  Recording a deed means to file it with the official state registry. Filing a deed protects the buyer and gives notice to the public of the official owner of the land. This keeps someone from trying to sell land that he does not own.

19 19 Adverse Possession  To gain ownership of land by adverse possession, the user must prove: Entry and exclusive possession Open and notorious possession A claim adverse to the owner; and Continuous possession for a statutory period.

20 20 Land Use Regulation  Nuisance Law A nuisance is an unprivileged interference with a the use and enjoyment of property.  Zoning State laws that permit local communities to regulate building and land use.  Eminent Domain Eminent domain is the power of the government to take private property for public use.

21 21 “Real property is ancient in origin and terminology, but every bit as potent as it was 1,000 years ago.” “Real property is ancient in origin and terminology, but every bit as potent as it was 1,000 years ago.”

22 22 Link to the Internet  Clicking on the orange button below will link you to the website for this book. (You must first have an active link to the internet on this computer.)  Once there, click: Online Study Guide, then Your choice of a chapter, then Practice, then Internet Applications  You should then see web links related to that chapter. Click here! Click above to return to the slide show.


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