Compucram: Property Ownership
pur autre vie
"For the life of another." where the measuring life is someone other than the life tenant
ad valorem
"according to value" used to refer to taxes assessed on the value of property
judgment
1. a court's binding determination of the rights and duties of the parties in a lawsuit 2. court order requiring one party to pay the other damages
accretion
A gradual addition to dry land by the forces of nature
general lien
A lien against all of the property owned by the debtor, real and personal
lien
A lien is an encumbrance (burden) on one person's property to secure a debt the property owner owes to another person.
dominant tenant
A person who has easement rights on another's property; either the owner of a dominant tenement, or someone who has an easement in gross.
encroachment
A physical object intruding onto neighboring property, often due to a mistake regarding the boundary.
chattel real
An item of personal property which is connected to real estate, for example a lease.
trade fixtures
Equipment a tenant installs for use in his or her trade or business, and can be removed by tenant before the lease expires.
Ownership in Severalty
Individual ownership.
license
Permission to use the land of another
reversion
Property or estate ownership that reverts back to the grantor after a temporary ownership period.
metes and bounds
The legal description of a property based on points of beginning, distances, directions, and degrees
air rights
The right to use, control and occupy the space above a particular parcel of land. May be transferred separately from the land
bundle of rights
The right to use, enjoy, possess and dispose of real property
reliction
When a body of water gradually recedes, exposing land that was previously under water.
specific lien
a lien that attaches to a specific piece of property
encumbrance
a lien, easement or restrictive covenant burdening the property owner's title
fee simple
absolute ownership of land, and therefore the owner may do whatever he or she chooses with the land. If an owner of a fee simple dies intestate, the land will descend to the heirs.
condominium ownership
actual fee simple title to designated areas of air, plus a percentage of ownership of "common elements" in the common area.
Tenancy by the entireties
co-ownership between husband and wife. undivided 1/2 interest and the right of survivorship
tenancy in common
co-ownership in which two or more persons each have an undivided interest in property with no right of survivorship
joint tenancy
co-ownership where the co-owners have equal undivided interests and right of survivorship. Must have 4 unities present
chattel mortgage
creates a lien on personal property
freehold
estate in which you have exclusive rights to enjoy the possession of a property for an undefined length of time.
Estate of Inheritance
estate that can be willed or descend to heirs
estate for life
form of joint ownership that allows one person to remain in a house until his or her death, when it passes to the other owner.
remainder
future interest given to a person (who is referred to as the transferee or remainderman) that is capable of becoming possessory upon the natural end of a prior estate
assessment
governments valuation of property for tax purposes
erosion
gradual loss of soil due to the action of wind or water
fixture
item of personal property that has been attached to or closely associated with real property in such a way that it has legally become part of the real property
estate for years (term tenancy)
lease with a specific beginning and end date
mechanics lien
lien claimed by someone who performed work on the property and has not been paid.
condemnation
local, state, or federal government seizes private property and compensates the owner. The power of the government to do this is called eminent domain, which essentially means the government takes private property for public use.
constructive notice
matter of public record.
lis pendens
notice stating that there is a pending lawsuit that may affect title to the defendants (person being sued) real estate
chattels
personal property, goods, or other items of property (moveable or immovable) that are not real property.
Actual Annexation
physically attaching something to the land
deed restriction
private agreements that restrict the use of the real estate in some way, and are listed in the deed
Apprutenance
property rights or items that are permanent and are passed along with the sale of the property.
condition
provision in a contract, deed, law, regulation, guideline etc. that makes the parties rights and obligations depends on occurrence of a particular event.
situs
site or location where something exists or originates.
cooperative ownership
the ownership of stock in a company with occupancy rights prescribed under a lease.
easement
the right to use some part of another person's real property for a particular purpose
defeasible fee
type of property ownership, where the ownership is dependent on specific conditions. If the conditions of ownership are violated, the property may be returned to the grantor or to a specified third party.
littoral rights
water rights of a landowner whose property is adjacent to a lake or contains a lake
riparian rights
water rights of a landowner whose property is adjacent to or crossed by a river (or any body of water)
actual notice
what a person sees or is told.
inquiry notice
when circumstances should alert a person to a problem that should be investigated.
Constructive Annexation
when something is so closely related to the property it is a fixture even though it is not physically attached.