Property Outline Spring 2008
Property Outline Spring 2008
Property Outline Spring 2008
HISTORY – WILLIAM I
I. Both Romans & Celts had influence in England:
• Celts owned property in common, and tribes had leaders. Romans come and institute a
system of private property ownership. In the clash btwn the 2, private property wins,
and the leaders end up privately owning the property. So now England is a mixture of
Celtic and Roman ideas of ownership.
II. Beginnings of Modern property rights during the Anglo-Saxon period
• Next come the Anglo-Saxons and the Jutes (Germanic tribes mostly) - they invade
England, and take a lot of it over. Germanic tribes tend to own property in common, but
not completely (like condo – you have to own something individually to have access to
communal property).
• Then Vikings come - they pillage and steal at that time (that’s how the culture was).
Some were Danes, and some Norwegians.
• Alfred the Great (King of Wessex) – victorious over the Danes. Alfred doesn’t kill all the
Danes, and told them they could live under their own law.
• So all living in peace until descendants of Alfred (about 100 years later) start killing
Danes. Danes from Denmark (Sweyn and son Canute) come to England to defend the
Danes. Victorious over West Saxons, and Canuteaccepted as king of England.
○ Ethelred actually has claim to throne,but he dies, and Canute marries Ethelred's
widow. But Ethelred'ssons are still alive and want to fight Canute.
• Ethelred's sons: Edward the Confessor and Alfred Atheling. Edward the
Confessor (grows up in Normandy - Frenchman)
• Canute (King of England, Denmark and Normandy) dies. But before he dies, he divides
England in 3 parts, Earldoms. When Canute dies, many rivals for his throne. Many of
them die.
• Ultimately, Edward the Confessor becomes King and reigns for a while, but not so
interested in being King, he is very religious.
• Godwin gains a lot of influence over Edward. Godwin becomes so powerful, he begins
to challenge Edward. Edward then turns to Normandy military (William I) for help &
they are victorious over Godwin. Since Edward has no sons, he promises throne to
William.
○ Godwin very powerful, and when Edward dies, Godwin's son Harold becomes
King of England.
• William in Normandy with big army ready to invade England. Norwegians also ready to
attack England.
○ Norwegians land in England (east) and Harold goes to fight them. Harold
victorious over Norwegians, who sail away and don’t come back.
○ Normans (led by William) land in south of England. Harold goes to South and
meet Normans at Hastings. Battle of Hastings changes the history of the world.
• 1066 - William I (the Conqueror) becomes king of England. says all land in England is
his
○ Many descendants of Canute trying to get throne, so William becomes ruthless,
and wipes out rivals for the throne (out of 70 Saxon lords, he kills 68).
○ Takes 70 of his henchmen (knights) and made then tenants in chief. They are
holding it for the king. They need to provide soldiers for the king (safety) and
food
• After 1070, the Norman system of property ownership takes effect
○ Now we have a "pyramid" society, and we begin to see the origins of the
American law of property (which is nothing without the king. Without the force to
protect it, it means nothing. People gave up rights of property for safety).
III. Hierarchy of land ownership:
• William owns all land and grants land to 70 knights – vassal of the Pope
• On top, you have the soldiers (knights) - directly on top is the tenant-in-chief
○ They are granted land (through subinfeudation)
○ Everyone owes services to someone above him, as well as part of their harvest.
• Next to the knights, you have priests - Church big player in medieval society
• In the middle, there is the mense-tenant (pronounced mean-tenant)
• At bottom, you have the tenant-in-demand
○ Tenants holdslands. Tenants closest to king are called tenants-in-chief.
○ lord, who owns the fief. Lord has servant and villains (peasants) to till the soil,
and some villains soldiers (at the bottom of the ladder)
• English people need security, and givesthemselves to others for that
security. So, they accept William b/c they need him for safety. This system
worked because it provided food and security to the populace.
IV. Doomsday Book - great survey of all landholdings in England executed by William I
• Describes the landholdings, and landholding relationships. Very valuable document.
• It forms the basis of the real estate law we practice today
• Socage is very diff from copyhold - a grant that stems from a royal grant.
Different from copyhold b/c it derives from custom, not royal grant
Socage becomes alienable and inheritable at a much earlier stage
II. Incidents – Economic tenure (Socage)
• Homage & fealty- tenant under homage bound to do nothing to injure lord or land; vice
vera
• Warship - lord (not mother) takes custody of minor's land until minor comes of age
○ The guy who dies is a knight, and can’t perform any services since he's dead. So
he gets profit on being a guardian of the ward. Has to pay lord again to get the
landholding.
• Marriage - approval by lord. Source of revenue, as approval given for a price.
○ He can stop men from getting married too (originally over widows and
daughters)
○ Seniorage - you can sleep with tenant's wife on the first night of the marriage
• Aids - lord could require financial or other aids from tenants (magna carta limited this
to 3 things)
LANDED ESTATES
I. Socage evolves to fee simple
• In feudalism, a tenant had a statusas a tenant of the fee or a tenant for life. Status
then becomes estate
• Rise of the fee simple estate - b/c of heritability and alienability
○ Fee simple estate, while still in early middle ages, still has services attached to it
(not free):
• Its forever - longer than you live, can't be taken away, except by power of
eminent domain
• Rights of inheritance - still there is a tax that goes to the baron
Under socage, you could inherit, but had to pay a transfer tax (first
up to the lord, then later becomes customary, but you still have to
pay)
So much money going to barons, they are gaining a lot of power
• You can borrow money against the estate (mortgage)
• You can buy and sell it
• Other types of feudal estates become part of fee simple
○ Fee tail - estate with an attempt to keep estate within the blood family -
conveyance to person & heirs of his body
○ Before fee tail, there was a conditional fee - property which if conveyed outside
family, you would lose it
II. The Fee Tail - an estate of inheritance in real property which cannot be sold, devised by will,
or otherwise alienated by the owner, but which passes by operation of law to the owner’s
heirs upon his death.
• Rich families wanted to make land inalienable - so the land stays with the family,
passed down through inheritability, and cannot be transferred (keep land, power &
money in the family). In 1258 they enacted the De Donis Conditional which changed
the Fee Simple to the Fee Tail.
• After enactment of De Donis, barons had a lot of power & overwhelmed the king (War
of the Roses). Great families had developed in the fee tail a secure land base from
which they could challenge the king.
○ Edward IV - Taltarum's Case 1472- King challenges undermines barons' power
from fee tail
• Created the means by which a tenant in tail would "bar the entail" - by
bringing a collusive lawsuit known as a common recovery, the fee tail
tenant in possession could obtain a court decree awarding him a fee
simple, cutting off all his rights of his issue and extinguishing any
reversion or remainder. (Alienability) Fee tail tenant thereby became the
sole owner
III. Seizin - Fee simple, fee tail and life estate are freehold estates. At common law, a freeholder
has seisin
• Seisin - possession of an estate of land
○ Livery of seisin - ceremonial transfer of the land; a deed, a particular happening
in a day
• The grantor and grantee come together, with witnesses, the grantor takes
a piece of soil, and ceremoniously hands it to the grantee. It's the literal
handing over of land.
IV. Inheritance of a Fee Simple (Hierarchy)
• Heirs - persons who survive the decedent and are designated an intestate successors
under the state's statute of descent. No living person has heirs.
• Issue - includes all further descendants (like grandchildren)
• Ancestors - if no issue, parents take as heirs
• Collaterals - all persons related by blood to the decedent who are neither descendents
nor ancestors
• Escheat - is a person dies without heirs, property in feudal times went to overlord; now
goes to state
LIFE ESTATE
I. Introduction - Tenant holds estate for his life only. Upon death of tenant, land goes back to
grantor
• English focused on leaving land to their heirs
○ Alternative - leave estate to wife for life with a remainder over to your children
(while life estate is in existence, the fee simple estate is called a remainder)
○ Wife can stay for life, children get fee simple; Useful - If wife remarries, doesn’t
go to those children, only to heirs of your body
• You can sell a life estate, but the grantor only has it for the life of the grantee. Then
would go to the person who owns the remainder. Probably wouldn’t want to buy a life
estate. No one can inherit your life estate
II. Alienability- The capacity for a piece of property or a property right to be sold or otherwise
transferred from one party to another.
• Restraints on alienability- withholds from the grantee the power of transferring his
interest
• Objections to restraints on alienability
○ Makes property unmarketable
○ Land not available for best and highest use (land can’t be used to its optimum)
○ It perpetuates a concentration of wealth
○ Discourage improvements and discourage loans.
• Unlikely to invest money if you can’t sell it; can’t get mortgages
• White v. Brown
○ Facts: Jessie Lidedied, and left a will that states, "I wish Evelyn White to have my
home to live in and not to be sold."
○ Court says it was a fee simple.
• Ambiguous, so the court looks at the surrounding circumstances. The
court decides that a person wouldn’t want tomake a will where his home
would be sold and its assets split up for the heirs to share. Most likely
they would want the home to stay in the family, so they gave White the
fee simple.
• Presumption of fee simple rather than life estate, unless clear intent that
it’s a life estate.
III. Valuation of Life Estate and Remainder
• Figure out how many years are left on the life estate (# years life expectancy); future,
present value
• You can mortgage it, if there's someone willing to lend you the money
○ Life estates can be measured by the life expectancy of the person who has it.
IV. Law of Waste - becomes relevant when two or more ppl have right to possess property at
the same time (concurrent), or consecutively. A should not be able to use the property in a
manner that unreasonably interferes with the expectations of B. Designed to avoid uses of
property that fail to maximize the property's value
• Affirmative Waste – (voluntary acts) Changes you make to the property that can
diminish future interest
• Permissive waste – (failure to act) Negligence - failure to take reasonable care of the
property
○ You have to pay taxes - if you don’t and property goes to state, then you're liable
to remainderment for waste
○ Insurance - Duk says you don’t have to carry property insurance if you're a life
tenant.
• Halper says: If there is insurance on the house, and house burns down, life
tenant will keep the proceeds. Remainder gets the property, but not
insurance proceeds. You have to require that insurance proceeds be used
for improvement purposes for the damaged house. You want insurance
for the 100% replacement cost of the building, specify the insurance co.,
etc.
• Point is you want to do a thorough job to protect the remainder
• Baker v. Weedon
○ Facts: Decedent leaves his 3rd wife Anna his farm for life with a contingent
remainder to her children or if no children, to his grandchildren from previous
marriages. Anna never has any children. Anna is old now and destitute, and she
cannot run the farm, so it has no use to her, and she wants to be able to sell it
because she needs the money now to live. Also, the farm is now worth a lot of
money, and is increasingly gaining value. So, if Anna continues to hold it, there
will be economic waste b/c she is not using it to full potential. However, the
remaindermen don’t want the farm to be sold yet b/c they see that the value is
increasing.
○ Economic waste if Anna holds, it but remaindermen stand to substantially lose
interest if land sold prematurely. Court uses necessity test & requires best
interest of all parties to be considered.
○ Rule: Court will only force a sale if in the best interest of ALL parties with
interests in a life estate, otherwise life tenant and remaindermen must agree
V. Why create a legal life estate – In drafting a life estate - you can give life tenant power to
sell or mortgage a fee simple
• Sale - circumstances might change so that a sale of the property is advantageous. The
life tenant cannot sell a fee simple unless all other persons having an interest in the
property consent or a court of equity orders sale and reinvestment of the proceeds
• Lease - it might be advantageous for the life tenant to lease the property for a period
extending beyond the life tenant's death
• Mortgage- if the life tenant has no capital of her own, she may be unable to improve
the property without borrowing from a bank and giving the bank a mortgage on the
property. A bank ordinarily does not lend money if the security is a life estate rather
than a fee simple.
• Waste - the life tenant may want to take minerals out of the land or cut timber or take
down a still usable building. The actions may constitute waste, entitling the
remaindermen to an injunction or damages.
• Insurance - the life tenant is under no duty to insure buildings on the land, If the life
tenant does insure buildings and the buildings are destroyed by fire, the life tenant has
been held entitled to the whole proceeds and the remaindermen nothing.
VI. Life estate (Halper's view vs. Duk)
• Duk mentions that the significant principle is that you can’t use your property that
would interfere with the expectations of the remainderment. Halper says
remainderment can’t expect anything, but there is a relationship.
• Duk has some reasons for not loving life estates;
○ Will render the title unmarketable - Halper says it won’t if life is long enough, you
can at least mortgage & lease it, and many of the problems associated can be
fixed by having insurance
○ You can’t sell it - Halper says not such a terrible thing, b/c its given to you to live
in
• Duk talks about a way out - life tenant can get power to sell property, but proceeds
must be divided with the remainderment (using the present worth formula)
• Duk recommends trusts - don't do life estates, instead do a trust
○ Trust - a lot of flexibility; lay it all out in trust instrument, and trustee figures it
out
○ Halper says empirically, trusts don’t work out so well. A lot of trustees are
thieves, not honest. A lotof trustees very negligent.
LEASEHOLD ESTATE
I. Leasehold Estate – Nonfreehold Estates
• Ground lease is a lease of a piece of land - Tenant will normally build a building, either
for his own use or use by others where he becomes a landlord. Ground lease landlord
agrees to a mortgage whereby the proceeds go to the tenant. Subordinated ground
lease - if tenant doesn’t pay lease, owner can get proceeds
• The Term of Years - A term of years is an estate that lasts for some fixed period of
time or for a period computable by a formula. A term must be for a fixed period, but it
can be terminable earlier upon some happening of some event or condition.
○ b/c it’s for a fixed period of time, no notice of termination is necessary to bring
the estate to an end.
○ Duk says it can start in a certain date and end on a certain date. Halper says
not necessarily true
• No tenant is willing to pay rent until property is available for use. Then
term really starts.
If you have to build a building, term may not exist for years
You do start the term, but not necessarily the obligations or rights
of tenant for years afterwards
• The Periodic Tenancy - Is a lease for a period of some fixed duration that continues
for succeeding periods until either the landlord or tenant gives notice of termination.
(month-to-month, year-to-year)
○ If notice is not given the period is automatically extended for another period
○ Creates an issue: if you really have a year to year tenancy, and you holdover
after 1st year is up, you'll probably get caught up into another year
○ Month-to-month - very useful; more flexible, mobile
II. The Tenancy at Will - This is a tenancy of no fixed period that endures so long as both
landlord and tenant desire.
• It’s a tenancy at will if lease provides that one party can terminate it, it is necessarily at
the will of the other too. Modern statutes ordinarily require a period of notice
• Garner v. Gerrish
○ Facts: Lease said "tenant has the privilege of termination of this agreement at a
date of his own choice." Landlord executrix tries to get tenant out saying the
lease created a tenancy at will.
○ Court rejects that a tenancy at will is created. The lease simply granted a person
right to tenant to terminate on date of his choosing. Otherwise, it would violate
the intent of the parties. A lease agreement that grants tenant the sole right to
terminate creates a "determinable life tenancy" for the tenant.
III. The Tenancy at Sufferance: Holdovers
• Arises when a tenant remains in possession (hold over) after termination of the
tenancy.
• In this situation, landlord has 2 options:
○ Eviction (plus damages), or
○ Consent (express or implied) to the creation of a new tenancy
• Crechale & Polles, Inc. v. Smith
○ Facts: Lease was for 5 years. At the end of the lease, tenant proposes a month
to month arrangement, but landlord refuses. Despite this refusal, tenant stays
past the end of lease and submits a check for a month. Landlord cashes the
check. The following month, tenant submits another check for one month's rent,
but landlord refuses to accept it. Instead, landlord brings suit against holdover
tenant for value of a one-year lease.
○ The landlord first requested that tenants vacate the premises, but he failed to
pursue the remedy for eviction. Then, he accepted the payment for the month
after the lease termination, so he implied that he accepted to the lease
extension on a month-to-month basis.
Vested remainder
Contingent remainder
Executory interest
• Future interest gives legal rights to its owner (it’s not merely an expectancy).
○ Owner of a future interest can:
• Sell or give away the remainder
• Can enjoin the present possessory owner from committing waste
• Sue 3rd parties who are injuring the land or are claiming the title hostilely
• Future interest does not entitle its owner to present possession, but it is a presently
existing interest that may become possessory in the future.
THE TRUST
I. The Trust - Allow settlors to arrange their assets in ways that maximize flexibility in property
management as well as transfer wealth to future generations.
• The trustee holds legal title to the trust property and manages that property for the
benefit of the beneficiaries, who have the right of beneficial enjoyment of the property
○ trustee has the power to sell trust assets and reinvest the proceeds in other
assets
○ Net income of the trust is paid to the beneficiaries
○ Upon termination of the trust, the trust assets as they exist are handed over to
the designated beneficiaries, free of the trust.
• Trustee is the legal owner (they hold the legal fee simple), but subject to equity court,
which enforces trustee's duties to beneficiaries. Beneficiaries hold equitable interests
• Trustee is a fiduciary - so subject to stringent duties in managing trust property;
○ Duty of loyalty - trustee must act for the exclusive benefit of the beneficiaries
• Benefits of the trust:
○ Spendthrift trusts - protect the beneficiaries interest by making them inalienable
• Rules against restraints on alienation don’t apply to beneficiaries'
equitable interests
• Duk says more reliable than gifts/sales of property with life estate, etc.
○ Proposes the trust as a useful instrument to overcome other difficulties
○ Problem with trusts - not all trustees are competent or honest. But most are
good.
○ You can use the trust to minimize the federal estate tax when the spouse passes
away
• Common law judges are distrustful of contingency and the feudal system (livery of
seisin). They wanted to preserve the system that they had.
• If the remainder is still subject to a condition precedent when the preceding estate
terminates, the remainder is wiped out, and the right of possession moves on to the
next vested interest.
○ Ex: O conveys property to A for life, then to B and her heirs if B reaches 21.
○ If at A's death B is under 21, B's remainder is destroyed. O now has the right of
possession.
• Also, a life estate could be terminated before the life tenant's death by forfeiture or
merger. The life tenant had the power to destroy contingent remainders whenever he
wished.
○ Ex: O conveys property to A for life, then to B and her heirs if B survives A
○ A conveys life estate to O; the life estate merges into the reversion, destroying
B's contingent remainder. O gets a fee simple, not a life estate from A (see
doctrine of merger)
• Doctrine of merger (still in effect today) provides that if the life estate and the next
vested estate in fee simple come into the hands of one person, the lesser estate is
merged with the larger
○ Ex: to A for life, remainder to B + heirs.
○ If A conveys life estate to B, the life estate and the remainder merge. B gets a
fee simple.
• The destructibility doctrine did not apply to executory interests or contingent
remainders in trust
○ The exemption of executory interests is why judges developed the Rule against
Perpetuities
• Important element - the rule against restraints on alienation. (RAP takes care of it
now)
III. The Rule in Shelley's Case - Under this rule, if an instrument creates a life estate in land in
A, and also creates a remainder to A's heirs (unascertained, so it’s a contingent remainder),
and the life estate and remainder are both legal or both equitable, then it becomes a
remainder in fee simple (vested remainder in A).
• The rule converted the contingent remainder into a vested remainder. That's all it did!
• Then the Doctrine of Merger may come into play:
○ Ex: Conveyance to "A for life, then to A's heirs"
• The Rule gives A a vested remainder in fee simple. A's life estate then
merges into the vested remainder, leaving A with a fee simple in
possession. The land is immediately alienable by A and not tied up for A's
lifetime.
• But, the life estate cannot merge into a vested remainder in fee simple if
there is an intervening life estate, blocking merger
• If grant is to heirs of body, same rule, but it becomes a fee tail.
• Reason for this Rule: Overlord gets relief when underlord dies; overlord doesn’t get
relief if underlord's heirs own property
IV. The Doctrine of Worthier Title - The rule provided that where there is an inter vivos
conveyance of land, with a limitation to the grantor's own heirs either by remainder or
executory interest, no future interest in the heirs is created. Instead, a reversion is retained by
the grantor.
• Since the grantor is trying to convey an heir the same estate in land that the heir would
take under the laws of inheritance, the heir would be adjudged to have taken title to
the land by inheritance rather than by the conveyance, because descent through the
bloodline was held to be "worthier" than a conveyance through a legal instrument.
• In this way, tax evasion was prevented (feudal tax through inheritance, not
conveyance)
• Ex: O conveys property "to A for life, then to O's heirs."
○ Without this doctrine, there is a contingent remainder in favor of O's
unascertained heirs
○ Under this doctrine, though, that contingent remainder doesn’t exist. Instead, O
has a reversion (after A's life estate terminates, goes back to O. If O is not alive,
then to O's heirs through inheritance).
• The doctrine also furthered alienability - O could convey a reversion, but since O's heirs
are not ascertained, they couldn’t convey the future interest
V. The Rule Against Perpetuities
• The Common Law Rule - Compromise btwn families who were concerned about
securing land from incompetent children, and the common law rule of alienability.
Judges basically created this rule, saying that they can understand that a father knows
the capabilities and the living members of his family, and from the father's informed
judgment, say that they want to restrict the alienability of the land given to
incompetent children. However, there was no way for the testator to know anything
about unborn children, so there was no reason to impose this restriction. Therefore, the
compromise was that the father was permitted to control the land as pertains to living
members only, so a time limit was imposed.
• Mechanics of the Rule
○ Only applies to interests that are not vested at time of conveyance (future
interests). These are:
• Contingent interests
• Executory interests
• Also, Class gifts (this is a special case)
○ Then, determine whether the interest might not vest within the perpetuity period
of "lives in being plus 21 years"
• You must prove that a contingent interest is certain to vest or terminate
no later than 21 years after the death of some person alive at the creation
of the interest. If you cannot prove that, the contingent interest is void
from the outset.
• The person's life that you are using to determine this is called the
validating life.
Validating Life:
○ The preceding life tenant
○ The taker or takers of the contingent interest
○ Anyone who can affect the identity of the takers
○ Anyone else who can affect events relevant to the condition
precedent
Ex: "for A for life, then to A's first child to reach 21"
○ A is the validating life. You can prove that any child to reach
21 will necessarily do so within 21 years of A's death. It is
certain to vest or fail within this period
In searching for the validating life, we ask whether there is with
respect to a given person an invalidating chain of possible events
after the interest's creation. It's what might happen, doesn’t matter
what actually does happen. If what might happens is that the
interest remains unvested following that person's life plus 21 years,
then that person can't be the validating life.
• All possible events, no matter how unlikely are taken into account. Examples:
○ The fertile octogenarian - presumes that anyone, even an octogenarian - that is,
a person between 80 and 90 years of age - can parent a child, regardless of
gender or health.
• "To A for life, and then to the first of A's children to reach 25 yrs" A at time is
85.
In applying the rule, you would argue that in her 86th year, A could
have a child, and in her 87th year, all her other children could die, and
she dies at 88. B/c the interest wouldn’t vest within 21 years of A's and
all her other children's death (they all form the lives in being), it makes
to gift void. Instead, after the life estate is over, there's a reversion.
• The precocious toddler - assumes a living person is fertile at birth
• The unborn widow - because who is a widow cannot be determined until the
spouse dies, the law will assume the possibility that he marries a woman not
born at the time a gift was made
• Ex: "for A for life, then to A's first child to reach 25"
○ There is no validating life; the contingent remainder is void. You cannot prove that
A's first child to reach 25 will do so within 21 yrs after A's death
• Class Gifts - a special case under the RAP
○ "all or nothing" rule holds that if a gift to one member of the class might vest to
remotely, the whole class gift is void.
○ For a class gift to be vested under RAP, the class must be closed (when gift is
created, every member of the class must be in existence and identified), and each
member of the class must be satisfied with the perpetuities period
• Ex: "A for life, then to A's children," and A has one living child B
The remainder is vested subject to open, but it is not vested under the
RAP until A dies and all of A's children are then in existence and
identified.
But because the remainder beneficiaries will be ascertained at A's
death, the remainder is valid.
• Future Interests in Transferors: Executory Interests Following Defeasible Fees; and Options
○ Future interests retained by transferor (reversions, possibility of reverter, right of
entry) are not subject to the RAP. They are treated as vested as soon as they arise.
Example: if you have a future interest retained in the transferor:
• O conveys Blackacre "to the School Board so long as it is used for a
school"
• School has a fee simple determinable, and O has a possibility of
reverter. Exempt from RAP.
However, if the future interest in retained in transferee:
• O conveys Blackacre "to the School so long as it is used for a school,
then to A + heirs"
• A's executory interest violates RAP b/c it will not necessarily vest within
A's lifetime, or within 21 years after A's death.
• When an interest violates RAP, it is struck out and the remaining valid
interests stand.
○ The Symphony Space, Inc. v. Pergola Properties, Inc.
○ Facts: Pl purchased a property (far below market price), and as part of that transaction,
Df retained an option for the exclusive right to repurchase the property. The option
allowed the holder to exercise the option to purchase the property if one of several
conditions were met. Pl defaulted upon the mortgage provision of the option and
triggered one of the preconditions for exercise of the option by Dfs. Dfs gave Pl notice
of their intention to repurchase the property.
○ Invalid under RAP; RAP also applies to commercial transactions
• Possibility that it won’t vest within 21 years.
CO-OWNERSHIP: PARTNERSHIPS
I. Covenants of a limited partnership
• Power of a limited partner tends to be constricted so that he agrees with the limited
partners that they can get involved in some decisions (not always true, but may
happen)
• General partner has a lot of power
○ Only person in the limited partnership that has unlimited liability
• b/c of power, may be crooked and defraud partners
• Unlimited liability - all assets are open to attack. This was a serious
problem:
• Ended this a while back - now a general partner of which there was limited
liability b/c it was a corporation.
This is a tax problem - then this type of partnership has to be taxed
like a corporation
So now under, some circumstances, sometimes taxed as corp
sometimes as partnership
Now tax law lets you choose if you want to be taxed as one or the
other
○ Partnership don’t pay taxes
○ For real estate businesses, corporation tend to be avoided
• Limited partner has only limited liability
II. How do you start a limited partnership?
• Write a partnership agreement. What do you need?
○ Statement that forms the organization
○ Give it a name and a term
○ Can last forever, but usually don’t. May not want it to last forever b/c that is an
attribute of a corp, and having this attribute, this would be a thing that would
make it taxable as a corp. although now you can choose how you want to be
taxed.
○ Title of agreement should be concise. Ex: Partnership Agreement, Date
○ Purposes of the partnership
• Largely irrelevant, b/c unless you limit the partnership to specific
purposes, the limited partnership can do anything
○ Tell who are the parties - who's involved?
○ Introduce the subject - tell the story
• What the deal is all about
• Identify the premises
• Limit liability to the one premises
○ Say who gets what
• Not every partner has to be equal to all the others - what share does each
get?
• Layers of clauses - Should be organized so that things that relate to each other are
near to each other. When you arrange things, you begin to understand the logic to the
deal, and the clauses then make sense.
○ 1st layer
• Every clause has an "address"
○ 2nd layer
• Obligations of the partners
All partners have an obligation to contribute capital
Time and attention of the partners
○ 3rd layer
• Some people get compensated for work
As a matter of law, you don have to be compensated, so to get
paid, it must be in the agreement
You may get paid a fixed amount depending on accomplishing
goals. May be percentage
• Compensation for administration, and also in getting goals accomplished
(development partnerships)
○ 4th layer - Then go into causes dealing with administration
• General partner
doesn’t have unlimited authority - the limitations are stated in
agreement, and consented to by 2/3 of partners
can be replaced - how to deal with that; way of getting them out
(b/c of illness, bankruptcy, crime, etc)
Provide that he has authority to bind partnership except ….
Provide that he must keep partnership funds in a bank account, and
invest funds in safe securities
Must keep books and records
Don’t pay income taxes - but do pay other types of taxes. Part of
general partner's responsibilities
Provide for a fiscal year. Usually use calendar year, b/c tax code
favors it.
• Tax matters partner - required to name one partner in charge of taxes.
Usually general partner, but doesn’t have to be. Purpose: IRS wants to talk
to 1 person on behalf of partnership
Provide for where the offices of partnership will be
○ 5th layer - relationship of partners to other partners and to partnership
• Fiduciary duty - duty to act in the best interests of the entire partnership,
even if they conflict with your own
Often litigated
• Don’t want partners to reveal information to competitors
• Distributions and allocations
Allocations - takes the money that comes in and allocates among
partners for 2 purposes
○ For income tax report
○ For balance sheets purposes - for financial statement
Distributions - means to get money back
• File a certificate for limited partnership with secretary of state
• Must publish an ad that you formed a company
III. Capital account - crucial element in organizing a partnership
• Every partnership has capital (shares in %), and is allocated among the partners
○ apartner can contribute property that has an agreed value. While there is a
single capital account for the partnership, each partner’s interest is tracked in
separate individual capital accounts.
• What influences your capital account?
○ Money you put in, and the money you take out
○ Can be increased by contribution of property - has to be valued through
negotiation
○ It also increases or decreases with the gains or losses of the partnership.
• The Partnership will income and expenses that will impact the capital account.
• Each year the Partnership will file a tax return which will show the allocation of the
Partnership’s profits or losses to the different partners. The partners then file their own
taxes and are responsible for the taxes on the profits or losses.
• Partnerships generally prohibit the assignment of interest. The reason is to control who
can participate in the partnership.
IV. Liquidation plan
• General partner will be the liquidation partner
• Assets would get sold, and debts paid.
• The partners need to equalize their share contribution
• Termination –
○ Taxes become due. Internal Revenue Code 704B
○ Liquidation officer oversees the dissolution of the partnership.
○ Equalization of capital accounts – at the end of the deal, the capital should first
be distributed so that those partners who contributed capital in excess of their
share in the partnership. Each partnerscapital level should be reduced or
increased until it equals their share in the partnership. Then there can be a final
distribution.
• Upon the death of a partner, the heirs can inherit the right to collect distributions but
that does not make them a partner automatically. Often the general partner gets to
decide who becomes a partner and who doesn’t. Sometimes the surviving partners
vote, some partnership use other means.
○ Tontine – partnership agreement where the last surviving partner gets
everything.
• On occasion a partner will want to leave or the Partnership will want to expel a partner.
The partnership agreement will usually address the method for accomplishing this.
Usually done through a buyout.
○ Aesthetic Regulation - most courts held that zoning was legitimate when used to further
public health, safety, and general welfare. To justify aesthetic zoning the determination
is often couched in terms of the safety (ugly billboards will fall on someone) or property
values (ugly houses make the house next door less valuable)
• State ex rel. Stoyanoff v. Berkeley
Facts: Pl apply to build a house in modern style in tudor style
neighborhood, but zoning says must promote “health and general
welfare” and required buildings to conform with surrounding structures.
So they were denied permit.
A permit may be denied if the structure would adversely affect the
general welfare and property values of the community. Stability of
value is directly related to general welfare.
○ Standards for aesthetic Regulation
• Anderson v. City of Issaquah
Facts: Pl applied for building permit and was denied; made numerous
modifications and continued to be denied; sued for unconstitutionally
vague provisions.
Aesthetic regulation is subjective so special effort must be made to
avoid arbitrary application; local building ordinances that impose
aesthetic conditions must provide sufficiently clear guidance to
interested parties.
○ Freedom of Speech
• City of Ladue v. Gilleo
Facts: Pl not allowed to put anti-war sign on her front lawn or in her
window because of local ordinance; sued for violation of First Amend
right to free speech.
Ordinances restricting signs may not be content-based and must
support a compelling public interest.
Govt may only regulate time, place and manner of speech. Because
the ordinance allows commercial signs it is discriminating based on
content.
Heightened scrutiny—substantial state interest and reasonably tailored
to accomplish that purpose. The desire to control lawn clutter is not
sufficient to overcome the ordinance’s chilling effect of free speech.
• Controls on Household Composition
○ Defining the “Family”
• Village of Belle Terre v. Boraas
Facts: Ordinancerestricted house to single-family occupancy and
excluded households with more than two unrelated persons; suit on
ground that ordinance was unconstitutional as arbitrary and
unreasonable.
The legislature may properly define what is a “family” for zoning
purposes if the ordinance is reasonable, not arbitrary and the definition
is rationally related to public welfare. Here the purpose is to maintain
family neighborhoods, decrease traffic and noise, low population
density—all legitimate.
○ Fair Housing Act—creates exception to FHA discrimination claims for regulations of the
number of individuals who can live in a house
• City of Edmonds v. Oxford House, Inc.
Facts: Ordinance controlling “family” composition limited to 5 or fewer
unrelated persons; group home for recovering alcoholics sued for
violation of FHA for failure to make reasonable accommodation for
disabled people;
The purpose of the FHA exception is to permit ordinances controlling
the number of occupants in relation to floor space for safety reasons;
○ Edmond’s purpose is to control the character of the
neighborhood.
A single-family zoning ordinance is not automatically exempt from FHA
scrutiny because it limits household size.
• Exclusionary Zoning
○ Low Income Housing: developing municipality must make by its land use regulations a
realistic opportunity for the development of low and moderate income housing.
• Southern Burlington County NAACP v. Township of Mount Laurel
Facts: Zoningordinances established lot size and floor plans in various
zones which made it so that none of the housing would be affordable
for low income residents. NAACP brought action on behalf of low
income people who sought housing in the town.
A developing municipality must make it realistically possible in its land
use regulations for housing to be built for low income residents;
the ordinance is facially invalid so burden shifts to municipality to show
valid reasons for not fulfilling obligation (financial reasons such as tax
burden for public resources are not valid)