Property II 3/16
Inter Vivos Gifts: Acceptance
- The donee must accept the property. - Acceptance of a valuable item is presumed.
Inter Vivos Gifts: Donative Intent
- The donor must intend to make an immediate transfer of property. - The donor must intend to make an irrevocable present transfer of ownership - If the intention is to make a testamentary disposition effective only after death, the gift is invalid unless made by a will. (Gruen)
Inter Vivos Gift
- The present transfer of a future interest, creates an effective gift - The ordinary gift of personal property that one living person makes to another. - Generally cannot be revoked. NOTE: The future transfer of a present interest is ineffective under the Statute of Wills unless it is in writing.
Inter Vivos Gifts: Delivery
- The property must be delivered to the donee, so that the donor parts with dominion and control. - Burden of Proof is on the proponent by clear and convincing evidence
Testamentary Gifts
- transfers an interest to the donee only in the future when the donor dies vs. an inter vivos gift which transfers the interest to the donee right now. - Is valid only if it satisfies the statute of wills, which requires a writing signed by the donor and witnessed by two or more people.
Elements of Inter Vivos Gifts (DAD)
1- Donative Intent 2- Acceptance 3- Delivery
Elements of Gifts Causa Mortis (DADA)
1- Donative Intent 2- Acceptance 3- Delivery and 4- Anticipation of imminent death
Inter Vivos Gifts: 3 Types of Delivery
1- Manual 2- Constructive 3- Symbolic
Inter Vivos Gifts: Delivery: Symbolic
Donor physically transfers to the donee an object that represents or symbolizes the gifted item. - In many jurisdictions, symbolic delivery is allowed only if manual delivery is impracticable or impossible.
Adverse Possession
ECHOES 1. Exclusive 2. Continuous 3. Hostile (mindset?) 4. Open and notorious 5. Entry and actual possession 6. Statutory Period
Gifts: Engagement Rings Fault v. No- Fault Jurisdictions
Fault= Minority Rule: if the donor was at fault, the donee keeps the ring; if the donee was at fault, the donor regains the ring No-Fault= Majority Rule: the ring is returned to the donor if the engagement is broken, regardless of who was at fault.
O to A and his heirs
Fee Simple Absolute
Gifts Causa Mortis (donatio mortis causa= gift on the occasion of death)
Gift causa mortis is a gift of personal property made by a living person contemplating death and is effective when it is made. NOTE: unlike inter vivos gifts, gifts causa mortis are revocable. Donor may revoke at any time before her death and in most states it is revoked automatically if the donor does not die.
Causa Mortis
Gift conditioned on death 1. Intent 2. Donor apprehended death 3. Delivery (active, constructive, symbolic) 4. Death occurred
Inter Vivos Gift
Gift given during lifetime of over 1. Intent 2. Delivery (actual, constructive, symbolic) 3. Acceptance (ownership begins at acceptance even if possession hasn't occurred)
Actual v. Constructive possession
House vs. the property the house sits on Ss 38
Gifts Causa Mortis: Anticipation of Imminent Death
MAJORITY: Donor must die from the illness or peril or donor's recovery revokes the gift. (Brind) MINORITY: It is still effective if the donor does not die from anticipated peril if: 1- death occurs within the same proximate time frame OR 2- the cause of death is related to the anticipated peril.
Gifts Causa Mortis: Revocation
MAJORITY: if the donor recovers, the gift is automatically revoked. MINORITY: if the donor survives, she must expressly choose to revoke, but a delay is dangerous. NOTE: Failure to revoke within a reasonable time after the donor is no longer in apprehension of imminent death eliminates the right of revocation. (RST 2d Property § 31.3)
Gifts: Engagement Rings
MINORITY: the gift of an engagement ring is unconditional, completed gift upon acceptance. (Albinger) MAJORITY: the gift of an engagement ring is subject to an implied condition that the marriage occur. - the gift does not become absolute untilt he marriage ceremony.
Gift by Check
No gift occurs until the check is cashed because the donor retains dominion and control of the funds.
Rule Against Perpetuities
No interest is good unless it must vest,if at all, not later than 21 years after some life in being at the creation of the interest
Inter Vivos Gifts: Delivery: Manual
Occurs when the donor physically transfers possession of the item to the donee. - Traditionally manual delivery of the gift is required if practicable.
O to A
Old: Life Estate Modern: Fee Simple Absolute
Tacking
Only through privity
Requirements for Patent
Patentable subject matter, Novelty, Usefulness, Non-obvious to a person having ordinary skill in the art
Permissive waste
Reducing the vale through neglect
If the future interest following a life estate is in the grantee, what is it called?
Remainder
Type of future interest in grantee
Remainder Executory interest
Distinguish between a remainder and a reversion
Remainder = future interested created when a grantor conveys an inherently limited possessory estate and, in the same conveyance, conveys the future interest to a second GRANTEE. Reversion = future interest created when a grantor conveys an inherently limited possessory estate and RETAINS the future interest.
Inter Vivos Gifts: Delivery: Constructive
Requires that the donor physically transfer to the donee an object that provides access to the gifted item. - Constructive delivery of gift is allowed if manual delivery is not practicable.
Types of future interest in the grantor
Reversion Possibility of reverter Right if entry
Inter Vivos Gifts: Delivery Standard
The delivery necessary to consummate a gift must be as perfect as the nature of the property and the circumstances and surroundings of the parties will reasonably permit. (Gruen)
To whom does a remainder belong?
The grantee
Gifts
The immediate transfer of property rights from the donor (person making the gift) to the donee (person receiving the gift) without any payment or consideration.
Legatee
Those receiving personal property upon death under a will
Divise
When you have a will you use it to DEVISE real property
Copyright
arises when works of authorship are captured in permanent form. Last entire life of author plus 70 yrs; original works of authorship fixed in any tangible medium of expression
Legacy or Bequest
giving personal property through a will
Conveying property
giving real property in lifetime through a deed
Heirs
heirs are determined upon death and not a moment before ; heirs are those who acquire property from those who die intestate (no will) Heirs take when there is no will
Patent: Novel
invention must be new and not previously sold, patented, or described
Collateral
legal term for siblings
Patent: Useful
needs to pass the threshold for usefulness in that value cannot be too speculative (don't have to establish market acceptance)
Patent: Non-obvious
some inventive step, originality that wasn't previously anticipated; cannot be developed as a natural matter-of-course by someone skilled in a specific art Holistic Standard: look at other related patents in community and marketplace and the background knowledge/skill of inventor
Divisees
those receiving real property in will
Distinguish between a remainder and an executory interest
A remainder never divests the prior estate (waits patiently) where as an executory interest almost always does
Distinguish between an executory interest and a right of entry or possibility of reverter.
An executory interest is a future interest held in a grantee, while a right or entry or possibility of reverter is a future interest retained by the grantor.
Copyright
Arises when works of original works of authorship are fixed in any tangible medium of expression
Rule Against Perpetuities applies to
Contingent remainder Executory interests Vested remainder subject to open
Affirmative waste
Intentionally depleting the value of the property (removing timber, oil) or changing the use of the property (old barn example) Open mine doctrine - can't speed up pace to remove value as fast as possible
O to A for life
Life Estate
Issue
Line beneath you
