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Chapter 2 Property Ownership and Interests 2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Chapter 2 Property Ownership and Interests 2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved

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Page 1: Chapter 2 Property Ownership and Interests 2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved

Chapter 2Property Ownership

and Interests

2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Page 2: Chapter 2 Property Ownership and Interests 2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved

IN THIS CHAPTER

• The types of ownership of real property. • Real estate agents must avoid the

temptation to give legal advice. • Real estate licensees must recognize the

basic concepts of law. • Licensees must encourage clients and

customers to become properly informed through appropriate legal counsel.

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Page 3: Chapter 2 Property Ownership and Interests 2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved

THE CONCEPT OF PROPERTY

• Real estate is the land and all improvements made both on and to the land, whether found in nature or placed there by humans.

• Real property is real estate plus all legal rights, powers, and privileges inherent in ownership of real estate.

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Page 4: Chapter 2 Property Ownership and Interests 2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved

Bundle of Rights• The sticks in the bundle include the

major sticks of land, fixtures, and fruits of soil, all of which are tangible (movable).

• The bundle also includes intangible rights such as air rights, water rights, mineral rights, easements, leases, mortgages, licenses, profits, and so on.

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Page 5: Chapter 2 Property Ownership and Interests 2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved

• Real property consists of land and everything permanently attached to land, as well as the rights of ownership.– Ownership is transferred by a deed.

• Personal property (personalty or chattel) is everything that is not real property.– Ownership is transferred by a bill of sale.

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Page 6: Chapter 2 Property Ownership and Interests 2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved

• Land is defined as the earth’s surface extending downward to the center of the earth and upward to infinity, including things permanently attached by nature.

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Page 7: Chapter 2 Property Ownership and Interests 2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved

Fixtures = Improvements

1. How permanent is the attachment?2. What was the intent of the person

installing the item?3. If it is removed, can the item be used

elsewhere?

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Page 8: Chapter 2 Property Ownership and Interests 2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved

Trade Fixtures

• Items of personal property that a business operator installs in a building space (whether owned or rented) are presumed to remain personal property.

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Page 9: Chapter 2 Property Ownership and Interests 2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved

An estate in real property is an interest in the property sufficient to give the holder of the estate the right to possession of the property.

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Page 10: Chapter 2 Property Ownership and Interests 2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved

Types of Estates

• Freehold estate is ownership for an undetermined length of time.

• Nonfreehold or leasehold estate signifies possession with a determinable end.

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Page 11: Chapter 2 Property Ownership and Interests 2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved

Fee Simple Absolute

• Provides the most complete form of ownership and bundle of rights available in real property; also called fee simple.

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Page 12: Chapter 2 Property Ownership and Interests 2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved

Life Estates

• A freehold estate that defines itself. • It is ownership, possession, and control

for the life of someone. • Ownership, possession, and control are

contingent upon living. • Therefore, the ownership, possession,

and control are lost at death. • Under a life estate, heirs of the deceased

owner inherit nothing. 2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Page 13: Chapter 2 Property Ownership and Interests 2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved

Estate Pur Autre Vie

• Based on the lifetime of a person other than the life tenant.

• Provides for inheritance by the life tenant’s heirs only until the death of the person against whose life the estate is measured.

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Page 14: Chapter 2 Property Ownership and Interests 2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved

Statutory Dower Rights

• Both dower (recognized in Michigan) and curtesy (not recognized in Michigan) refer to an automatic life estate owned by a surviving spouse in inheritable property owned by the deceased spouse alone during the marriage.

• If the owner of the land is the husband, the wife has a life estate called dower.

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Page 15: Chapter 2 Property Ownership and Interests 2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved

LEASEHOLD ESTATES (NONFREEHOLD ESTATES)

• Estate for Years (Fixed Termination)• Estate from Year to Year (Periodic Estate)• Estate at Will• Estate at Sufferance

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Page 16: Chapter 2 Property Ownership and Interests 2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved

Ownership of Real Property

• Ownership in Severalty• Concurrent Ownership– tenancy in common– joint tenancy– tenancy by the entirety– community property

o Right of survivorshipo Right of inheritance

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Page 17: Chapter 2 Property Ownership and Interests 2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved

Condominium = Jointly Controlled

• “Horizontal Property Acts” authorize a three-dimensional property description, with a property line above and below the condominium.

• These horizontal property lines create a cube of air space or a volume that is the privately owned condominium.

• Air rights and area below the land surface are owned as tenants in common.

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Page 18: Chapter 2 Property Ownership and Interests 2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved

Michigan Condominium Act a prospective purchaser of a new construction condominium must be provided detailed information concerning construction and proposed operating procedures.

1. the recorded master deed with the attached bylaws and subdivision plans

2. a copy of the purchase and escrow agreements

3. the Condominium Buyer’s Handbook4. a disclosure statement

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Page 19: Chapter 2 Property Ownership and Interests 2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved

Other Condo Considerations

• Site Condominiums• Cooperatives• Timesharing• Michigan Uniform Securities Act• Syndications

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Page 20: Chapter 2 Property Ownership and Interests 2010©Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved

bill of sale bundle of rights chattel community property concurrent condominium convey cooperative co-ownership curtesy declaration deed defeasible dower emblements estate at sufferance estate at will estate for years estate from year to year estate in real property fee simple absolute

CHAPTER TERMINOLOGY REVIEW

fixture freehold estate joint tenancy leasehold estate life estate life tenant master deed Michigan Condo Act Michigan Uniform Securities Act nonfreehold estate ownership pur autre vie remainder

reversion right of first refusal right of inheritance right of survivorship separate property severalty site condominium syndication tenancy in common tenants by the entirety timesharing trade fixtures unities of ownership

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