Property Outline
Property Outline
Property Outline
Introduction
A. Ownership is a bundle of rights
B. Is there a natural human instinct for property ownership?
C. Goffman: Asylums
1. In spite of efforts of administration, people try to possess certain things.
2. Strongest take what they want associated with bad wards
3. First come, first served associated with good wards
D. Pipes: Human nature and the fall of communism
1. Even animals have ownership theyre possessive about things.
2. Studies of young children showed that some of the first concepts they understand, as
well as their initial communications/conflicts, center around property/ownership.
3. The Bolshevik revolution led to widespread corruption and a decline in public spirit.
This led to a decline in the will to live collective depression.
E. Lockean labor theory: you have property in your person, and so the labor of your body is
yours.
b.
c.
d.
e.
iii. Gangs will inflict revenge on others who encroach upon their territory.
iv. The ocean is technically open access, but its de facto private property. The
gangs tend not to act too aggressively with intruders because they want to
avoid identification, government regulation, and full-blown lobster wars.
v. Consider the transaction costs of these agreements.
vi. So whereas Hardin would say that a communal resource gets abused, Acheson
would argue that it causes private property rights to develop.
f. Demsetz: Toward a theory of property rights
i. Property rights emerge because of the relationship between transaction costs
and potential benefits associated with the control of resources through
property rights.
ii. Three types of ownership
(i) Private: Low transaction costs, tends to reduce externalities; preferred
(ii) Communal: Great externalities; negative view of this
(iii)
Government
iii. Note: When externalities confer a benefit, we have a free-rider problem.
iv. Utilitarian theory is the dominant theory of property. Minimal constraints on
the transfer property are necessary to further this theory.
v. How do we minimize the overutilization of resources facilitated by the rule of
capture? Private property rights, regulation, compulsory utilization for all
owners, individual transferable quotas, etc.
vi. Anticommons e.g., businesses in Moscow during communist rule, urban
renewal. This happens through splintering property rights one person has
the right to sign a lease, another to receive revenue, another to occupy, etc.
g. Central point: Law is the product of human interaction and doesnt just come
from the government.
3. Property rights in natural resources
a. Oil and gas
i. The fugitive nature of oil and gas has led courts to treat them like animals. So
when an adjoining owner taps into his land and drills out the oil thats
underneath both of your properties, he owns it.
ii. Suppose A and B are adjoining landowners with a common pool of oil beneath
their land.
(i) If B starts draining the pool, A probably cannot do anything about it,
except maybe when its excessive drilling. Union Gas & Oil v. Fyffe (JY
1927). Basically, its a rule of capture.
(ii) If the common pool is diagonally-shaped and bottoms out on As property,
B probably cannot drill diagonally but can drill straight down.
(iii)
If A reinjects gas that spills into Bs land, can B sue for use of
property? One case that said no, because it became Bs gas under the rule
of capture, was highly criticized and later overruled. Hammonds v.
Central Kentucky Natural Gas Co. (KY 1934)
b. Water
i. Groundwater: Water found in underground aquifers.
(i) English rule: Can draw freely.
(ii) American rule: Reasonable use. Cannot be wasteful.
(iii)
ii. Copyrights: Protect the expression of ideas in books, articles, music, etc.
Usually last 70 years after death of the author or creator, subject to fair use.
iii. Trademarks: Words and symbols indicating the source of a product or service.
These dont expire.
b. IP, unlike normal property, is non-rival and non-excludable. Our system of
protecting IP is very arbitrary who not have the government hire people?
c. Diamond v. Chakrabarty (US 1980)
i. P tried to patent a man-made bacterium that would help with oil spills. Patent
application denied because micro-organisms are products of nature and that as
living things they are not patentable under 101.
ii. Is the micro-organism a manufacture or composition of matter within 101?
iii. Burger: Yes. Things that are not patentable: laws of nature, physical
phenomena, and abstract ideas. But this micro-organism is markedly different
from any one found in nature and has potential for significant utility. This is
not a discovery of nature, but P. Patentable.
iv. Plants also arent patentable. But this case isnt analogous because the
legislative history doesnt suggest bacteria are included in plant variety
protection statutes. Also, it doesnt matter that this is natural the proper
distinction according to the statute is whether its nature-made or man-made.
Living things can also be in the scope of 101.
v. It doesnt matter that Congress didnt expressly include bacteria within the
scope of patent protection. The language of 101 suggests bacteria are
patentable.
vi. Brennan (dissent): Need to be careful to extend patent protection. Finds plant
patent acts controlling suggest that bacteria shouldnt be patentable. 101
shouldnt include living organisms.
vii. Harvard Mouse genetically engineered mouse developed for cancer
research. Was patented. Whats good and bad about this? What happens
when the mice reproduce like a fugitive resource?
d. Article re: Open access and Lessig
i. With cases like Eldred v. Ashcroft (US 2003) and laws like the Digital
Millennium Copyright Act upholding extensions to copyrights, is the US
becoming less creative of a nation?
ii. Copy Left: Its not so good that rights of small pieces of culture are doled
out for small payments. We should have more open access.
iii. When researchers have to get permission from several patentholders to go
forward with their research, isnt something wrong going on?
iv. But what about the authors? Romantic notions of creation. Utilitarianism.
Lockean theory.
3. Property rights in ones persona/person
a. Right of publicity is often recognized as a sort of property interest for celebrities.
Should/does it provide protection in cyberspace?
i. This will protect your self name, likeness, and other aspects of your
identity.
ii. E.g., Midler v. Ford Motor Co. (9th Cir. 1988) (voice of Bette Midler); Vanna
White v. Samsung Electronics America, Inc. (9th Cir. 1992) (robot made to
look like Vanna White). Lugosi v. Universal Pictures (CA 1979) (dicta that
heirs of celebrities who used personalities for commercial purposes could
recover for people who used those characteristics without permission).
iii. Demsetzian story here technology enabled copying of characteristics.
b. Moore v. Regents of the University of California (CA 1990)
i. P was treated by D; some of his cells were extracted. It just so happened that
the cells were very valuable for use in treating cancer. D patented these cells
and developed research based on them without Ps consent. P sued for
conversion.
ii. Does a doctor have a duty to disclose the extent of his research and economic
interests in a patients body parts? Yes.
iii. Are human body parts property such that they may be converted?
iv. No. Must show interference with possession or property interest. No
possession here. No property interest. Body parts are different policy goals.
CA statutes limit patients control over excised body parts. Also, the patent
cant be Ps property; its different from his organs. This isnt as unique as
likeness and the such; have same structure in every human being.
v. Conversion shouldnt be extended. Want to protect researchers from liability.
Duty to disclose protect patients interests. Institutional competency; leave it
to the legislature. Thus, no property interest in body parts.
vi. Arabian (concurring): Human body is sacred. Difficulties would arise if we
let people sell bodies for profit.
vii. Mosk (dissent): Concepts of property/ownership are very broad. Uniform
Anatomical Gift Act lets competent adults make post-mortem gifts of any/all
organs, but cannot receive consideration. This doesnt prohibit sales when
alive. The Act, in fact, recognizes a right to sell. Unfair to let Ds get all the
profit, P none.
viii. Arabian concurrence misses the point we can have a bundle of rights
that dont include selling for profit. Could have, e.g., enforced right to
alienate.
ix. Donation rate for dead people is about 15%. Living people can sell semen,
skin tissue, and blood. Kant degrading people to objects.
x. Case of a man who committed suicide and in a note willed his sperm to his
live-in girlfriend of several years. Eventually, after much litigation, the
girlfriend got the sperm.
xi. What about the poor? Article on organ donations in India 96% sold to pay
off debts. Some middlemen make misrepresentations to donors. all who were
in good or excellent health had severe declines after donation.
xii. Federal law prohibits organ purchases.
c. Jacque v. Steenberg Homes, Inc. (WI 1997)
i. D attempted to travel across Ps land to move a trailer. D tried to get
permission but P wouldnt give it.
ii. May punitive damages be imposed when nominal damages are awarded for an
intentional trespass to land?
iii. Yes. P has right to exclude people from land. Nominal damages (in this case,
$1) arent enough to deter. (In other words, landowners have right to
unreasonably exercise the right to exclude.)
iv. Blackstone would commend this decision. He viewed property as an absolute
right. What about the right not to be excluded, though? More and more
limitations on this notion of property. Whats wrong with absolute rights?
Epstein argues nothing; it just sets up for later market transactions.
(i) Local governments often prohibit aggressive panhandling, overnight
sleeping in public places.
v. Spectrum: Property rule would be the rule above interest cannot be taken
without owners consent. So award nominal, punitive damages for trespass.
Alternately, we could just let D enter and not impose any costs on him.
Liability rule would permit trespass for a price (a reasonable amount).
Basically an option to buy a license for a judicially-determined amount. E.g.,
eminent domain.
d. State v. Shack (NJ 1971)
i. D entered onto Ps property to provide legal advice to illegal alien. D refused
to leave when P ordered him to.
ii. May a landlord use land in a manner that endangers the well-being of others?
iii. No. D can enter without having to pay anything. Property rights serve public
policy and needs of others. Federal law authorizing D to give legal aid to
migrant farm workers declared a public policy of aiding these people. P cant
interfere with that.
percentage goes to finder unlike other property law, where finder gets all or
nothing.
i. Some states maintain the lost/mislaid/abandoned distinction (abandoned property
finder entitled to keep).
B. Acquisition by adverse possession
1. Elements
a. Actual entry giving exclusive possession that is
b. Open and notorious
c. Adverse under a claim of right and
d. Continuous for the statutory period.
2. CA Code of Civil Procedure
a. 321 Presumption that true owner was in possession unless it appears adversely
possessed for 5 years.
b. 322 Claim of title, exclusive of other right, founded upon a written instrument
as a conveyance or decree or judgment by a competent court, continuous
occupation/possession, for 5 years.
c. 323 Based on written instrument, possessed and occupied in the following
cases:
i. Usually cultivated or improved
ii. Protected by a substantial inclosure
iii. Although not inclosed, has been used for the supply of fuel, or of fencing
timber for the purposes of husbandry, of for pasturage, or for the ordinary use
of the occupant
iv. Where a known farm or single lot has been partly improved, the portion that
may have been left not cleared, or not inclosed according to the usual course
and custom of the adjoining country, shall be deemed to have been occupied
for the same amount of time as the part improved and cultivated
d. 324 When no claim under written instrument, only the land actually occupied
can be adversely possessed
e. 325 Adverse possession not founded upon a written instrument is possessed /
occupied only:
i. Where land is protected by a substantial inclosure
ii. Where it has been usually cultivated or improved
iii. Adverse possession not shown under any section of this code unless land has
been occupied continuously for 5 years and the party, predecessors, and
grantors have paid all the taxes levied and assessed upon the land state,
local, county, etc.
3. Justifications
a. Encourage efficient use of land, clarity of title, facilitates transfers of land.
b. Holmes also says that after a certain point, land becomes part of you
psychological benefits. Seems very Lockean.
c. Powell says it rests on social judgments that passage of certain time should give
security to person claiming to be owner.
d. Ballantine says purpose is to quiet title.
e. Ellickson claims it has quite a bit to do with cognitive psychology value loss of
an asset in possession more than foregoing opportunity to realize equivalent gain.
10
11
12
13
(iii)
14
(vii)
Condition precedent: Condition incorporated into the language that
created the interest.
(viii)
Condition subsequent: Condition not incorporated into the
language that creates the interest.
(ix) Indefeasibly vested remainders give you the flexibility to deal with
marriages, divorces, births, and disabled or incompetent children. If
everything is contingent upon you surviving your parent(s), then you cant
deal with these changing circumstances very well.
1. To avoid these problems, the grantor could give life tenant power of
appointment; or making remainder contingent upon surviving life
tenant and giving remainderman a special power of appointment
exercisable if the remainderman predeceases the life tenant. A special
power of appointment is the power to appoint the property among a
limited class of persons.
(x) Can you adopt your adult spouse to get favorable treatment in a trust?
Some cases say no, since it would flout the intent of the trust.
d. Rule against perpetuities
i. No interest is good unless it must vest, if at all, no later than 21 years after
some life in being at the creation of the interest ends.
(i) Originated in Duke of Norfolks Case (England 1681).
(ii) The validating life need not be mentioned in instrument, but must
somehow effect vesting of the interest.
(iii)
A child in the womb as of creation of instrument is in being.
(iv) A reasonable period of gestation can be tacked on to the period.
ii. Measures what could happen.
iii. Rules of construction
(i) Prefer vested to contingent
(ii) Prefer early vesting to later vesting
(iii)
Avoid partial intestacy
(iv) Prefer fee simple absolute
iv. Similar policies as adverse possession. Want to respect wishes of transferor,
but dont want to give him too much power to rule in the distant future.
v. Future interests retained in the transferor are not subject to RAP. (Although in
England, the possibility of reverter and right of reentry are.)
vi. The Symphony Space, Inc. v. Pergola Properties, Inc. (NY 1996)
(i) In 1978, B sells building to P for a very low price. B maintains
possession because P leases it back to B for $1/year. (This is a tax evasion
deal.) B granted option to repurchase in 1987, 1993, 1998, or 2003. B
sold its interest for almost $5m; D eventually purchased it. Value of
property increased significantly and D exercised option.
(ii) Are options to purchase commercial property exempt from RAP? No.
RAP applies to commercial option contracts. An exception would remove
an entire class from RAP, and thats not warranted by the language or
legislative history.
(iii)
Does the option contract violate RAP? Yes. It must vest by 1999,
but theres an option in 2003.
15
16
i. Separate but undivided interests in the property. Each is descendible and may
be conveyed by deed or will. No survivorship rights.
ii. Need unity of possession.
b. Joint tenancy
i. Have a right of survivorship. Together regarded as a single owner. When
joint tenant dies, nothing passes to other joint tenant. It just continues.
Cannot will any interest in joint tenancy.
(i) So creditors cant seize anything after a joint tenant dies, but can when
hes alive.
ii. Four unities needed:
(i) Time: Interest of each joint tenant must be acquired or vest at the same
time.
(ii) Title: All joint tenants must acquire title by the same instrument or by a
joint adverse possession. A joint tenancy can never arise by intestate
succession or other act of law.
(iii)
Interest: All must have equal undivided shares and identical
interests measured by duration.
(iv) Possession: Each must have a right to possession of the whole. After its
created, one joint tenant can voluntarily give exclusive possession to the
other.
iii. If not all of the four unities are present at creation, then most states and the
common law provide that it is a tenancy in common. If one of the unities
severs, its converted into a tenancy in common.
iv. If joint tenants or tenants in common cannot come to mutual agreement, any
of them can bring action for judicial partition. Court will either physically
partition land or order land sold and divide proceeds among the tenants.
v. Joint tenancies help people avoid probate. But Congress got smart and subject
joint tenancies to estate taxation.
vi. Courts frequently ignore the equal share unity; courts frequently divide
proceeds according to intent of parties.
c. Tenancy by the entirety
i. Can be created only in husband in wife. (Although HI recently permitted
reciprocal beneficiaries unmarried people who cannot get married to have
a tenancy by the entirety.)
ii. H and W are considered a single holder. They cannot defeat the right of
survivorship of the other by a conveyance of a third party. H and W must both
consent to conveyances.
iii. Exists in slightly less than states.
d. Presumptions
i. Tenancies in common over joint tenancies
ii. Usually a presumption that if conveyed to H and W, it will be a tenancy by the
entirety, absent some clear indication otherwise
iii. Some states require specific language (by statute) to convey a joint tenancy
e.g., to A and B as joint tenants with the right or survivorship (But in some
states including expressly a right of survivorship will be interpreted as
conveying a joint life estate with alternative contingent remainders.)
17
18
19
(iv) Ps remedies:
1. If theres no ouster, a joint tenant can only recover agreed upon price.
a. If agreed upon price is higher than FMV, then a joint tenant could
just argue no ouster.
2. If there is ouster, a joint tenant can recover fair market value here.
iii. Accounting for benefits
(i) Cotenant who collects rent or other payments from 3d parties must
account to cotenants for amounts received.
(ii) Cotenant who pays more than his share of taxes, mortgage payments, or
other necessary carrying charges usually has a right to contribution.
1. An exception that is not uniformly applied is when the cotenant who
pays taxes and the such is the sole possessor and the value of the
possession equals or exceeds the payments.
(iii)
Necessary repairs: No affirmative right to contribution unless
theres an agreement. But can receive credit in accounting action.
(iv) Improvements: No right to contribution, no credit.
C. Marital ownership of property
1. Common law system
a. During marriage
i. At common law, H had complete dominion over property. Married Womens
Property Acts permitted W to have control over all of her property.
ii. Sawada v. Endo (HI 1977)
(i) D and W conveyed their property to their sons without consideration one
the same day D got into an accident with Ps. Ps received judgment against
D.
(ii) Is the interest of one spouse in real property held by tenancy in the entirety
subject to levy and execution by his creditors?
(iii)
No. 4 groups of laws on this:
1. Debtor spouse = D; non-debtor spouse = H. 2 is the right of
survivorship.
2. Group I: Old common law: H is the real owner of marital property
a. If D=H, then D1, D2, and X1 can be sold/levied upon.
b. If D=W, then creditor is SOL.
3. Group II: W has the same rights as H under old common law (leveling
up).
a. D1+D2 can be levied upon. So if X dies first, creditors are very
happy.
4. Group III: H has same rights as W under old common law (leveling
down). Following Married Womens Property Acts.
a. Nothing can be levied upon.
5. Group IV: Right of survivorship for either spouse is separately
alienable.
a. Can only sell/levy upon D2.
(iv) Hawaii joins Group III. Since a tenant by the entirety cannot convey his
interest without the consent of his spouse, it cannot be reached by only one
spouses creditors.
20
(v) Dissent: Should have joined Group II thats whats compelled by the
Acts.
iii. United States v. 1500 Lincoln Avenue (3d Cir. 1991)
(i) D/H used property he owned with D/W (completely innocent) for the
illegal distribution of drugs. Government/P tried to forfeit property.
(ii) Can the action of one tenant by the entirety in subjection property to
forfeiture extinguish the property rights of the other tenant?
(iii)
No. Two purposes to forfeiture statute: forfeit property used for
drug offenses and protecting rights of innocent property owners.
(iv) W is entitled to obtain title in fee simple if she doesnt predecease H. Her
interest cant be touched by a levy against her husbands interest. Here the
government will be quite happy if W predeceases H.
(v) Result may be different (i.e., in favor of wife) if H doesnt use the property
for illegal purposes. United States v. Lee (7th Cir. 2000)
b. Termination of marriage by divorce
i. The common law said the following (but this has been rejected everywhere):
(i) Marital property converted to property of spouse holding title
(ii) Property held as tenants in common or joint tenants remained that way
(iii)
Tenancy by the entirety converted to tenancy in common
(iv) Wife usually entitled to lifelong alimony
ii. Common law property states have instead adopted a rule of equitable
distribution. More common trend is to subject marital property to equitable
distribution.
iii. Obligation to pay lifelong alimony abandoned. Now its for only a limited
period of time.
iv. Movement toward equally distributing property upon divorce
v. In re Marriage of Graham (CO 1978)
(i) P/W (flight attendant) supports D/H while D went to b-school and worked
part-time. Ps income contributed about 70%. P did most housework. No
marital property accumulated. P wanted to get future earnings.
(ii) Does education constitute property which can be divided between spouses
upon divorce?
(iii)
No. Degree is of personal value to holder. Terminates on death of
holder. Not inheritable. Cannot be transferred, sold, assigned, etc. Ps out
of luck since no marital assets acquired (in that case, her contribution
would be considered).
(iv) Dissent: Most valuable asset P and D acquired during marriage was Ds
earning capacity. Ps earnings were an investment. Lets consider equity.
(v) Approach 2: Reimbursement. Professional degree is not marital property
because its too speculative in value. Working spouse can get
reimbursement alimony (covers all financial contributions toward
education, including household expenses). (Most states agree with
Graham or Mahoney.) Mahoney v. Mahoney (NJ 1982).
(vi) Approach 3: Full compensation. Reimbursement is not an adequate
remedy. Degrees are marital property (statute provides for consideration
21
22
v. No single spouse can sell ownership interest. No single spouse has right to
partition or other action.
vi. No survivorship feature. Can be passed through laws of intestacy. Some
states (CA included) have developed community property with right of
survivorship.
vii. At death, stepped-up tax basis value of property at death, rather than
purchase price. Internal Revenue Code 1014.
(i) This can be secured by residents of a common law stated by creating a
community property trust in AK with an AK resident as trustee.
(ii) Can also be secured by a couple changing domicile to community property
state and agreeing to hold property as community property, then moving
back to original state.
viii. Can devise community property.
c. Management
i. Since 1960s, all community property states have passed laws giving H and W
equal rights to management.
ii. Some detailed rules.
iii. Manager is a sort of fiduciary. Good faith but not good judgment needed.
d. Mixing community property with separate property
i. Three approaches
(i) Inception of right
(ii) Time of vesting (i.e., when property is paid off)
(iii)
Pro rata apportionment depending upon relative contributions of
individual in individual capacity v. community subsequent to marriage
(more common).
ii. Suppose W has business that she operates before marriage and then sells it off
5 years after marriage, with it more than doubling in value since marriage.
(i) In CA, the division of proceeds depends on whether the increase in value
is primarily due to Ws personal activity and abilities or the character of
the investment in the type of business.
(ii) If its all Ws effort, its all community property. If its entirely due to the
nature of the industry, then its all Ws.
e. Migrating couples
i. Once the property has been characterized, ownership does not change when
the parties change their domicile unless both parties consent to the change in
ownership.
ii. When someone dies, the law of his domicile at death governs the disposition
of personal property. The law where land is located governs the disposition of
land.
iii. Community property states usually dont give surviving spouse a forced share.
23
V. Landlord/tenant law
A. The leasehold estates and the lease
1. Four types of leaseholds
a. Term of years: Lease for a single, fixed period
b. Periodic tenancy: Lease for period-to-period
i. Notice of termination by either party must be given within at least one period
but not more than six months.
ii. If notice is inadequate for the next period, when does it become effective?
The period after that. S.D.G. v. Inventory Control Co. (NJ 1981) majority
view
c. Tenancy at will: Lease for no fixed period that endures so long as both landlord
and tenant desire.
i. Unlike term of years or periodic tenancy, death of the landlord or tenant
affects the tenancy at will.
ii. Modern statutes usually require notice of, say, 30 days to terminate.
iii. While this necessarily can be terminated by either landlord or tenant, a
unilateral power of termination can be engrafted on to a term of years or
periodic tenancy.
iv. Garner v. Gerrish (NY 1984)
(i) D leased house to G. G had option of terminating lease at his choice. P
(executor of Ds estate) wants G out.
(ii) If a lessee may terminate a lease when he pleases, is a determinable life
tenancy created?
(iii)
Yes. A life estate determinable is created when a lessee has the
option of terminating when he pleases. It ends when he dies or terminates.
(iv) L leases Blackacre to T for as many years as L desires. 3 approaches:
1. Old common law: Tenancy at will; T also has right to terminate.
2. Garner: Life estate determinable
3. Restatement 2nd of Property, Landlord and Tenant: Fee simple
determinable
(v) L leases Blackacre to T for the duration of the war. Its not a term of
years or a periodic tenancy, so it must be a tenancy at will. But this
appears to go against the intent of the parties. Perhaps it can be modified
by contract. Tension between intent and certainty in property law.
1. Courts will sometimes follow intent in spite of law, and sometimes
not. Some courts say that when a lease is ambiguous, theres a
rebuttable presumption that its at the will of both parties.
d. Tenancy at sufferance (holdover)
i. Crechale & Polles, Inc. v. Smith (MS 1974)
(i) D held over after the end of his five-year lease. P rejected a term-to-term
lease and treated him as a trespasser. P then accepted rent for first month,
though and now wants to subject him to a full-lease term.
(ii) If a landlord elects to treat a holdover tenant as a trespasser, may he
subsequently change his mind and hold him to a new term?
(iii)
No. Landlord has two options when a tenant holds over: treat him
as a trespasser or hold him over for a new term. Cannot change mind.
24
25
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
26
27
iv. Case law is pretty divided on English v. American rule. Under American rule,
tenant can sue tenant wrongfully in possession. Can recover possession and
damages.
v. If L leases T a landlocked parcel, L still has duty to deliver actual possession
under English rule. Moore v. Cameron Parish School Bd. (LA 1987).
vi. If L leases to T and has another lease with X, but T is in possession, T must
still pay rent. Campbell v. Henshey (KY 1970).
vii. Clause in contract that L is excused from liability for failure to deliver
possession if building is still under construction is unconscionable. Seabrook
v. Commuter Hous. Co. (NY 1972).
2. The defaulting tenant
a. Berg v. Wiley (MN 1978)
i. D leased to P for term of 5 years (twas a commercial lease). Lease provided
that consent necessary for any change in building structure. P remodeled
without permission and violated health code. D eventually succeeded at
changing locks. Trial court found entry was forcible.
ii. May L use self-help to retake possession?
iii. No. At common law, circumstances when L could use self-help:
(i) L legally entitled to possession and
(ii) Ls means of entry are peaceable
iv. No determination that D was entitled to possession L cant determine this,
courts must. As to entry: Public policy against self-help. Summary
proceedings available, dude! Treble damages for forced entry! So entry was
not peaceable. Only reason violence didnt erupt was because locks were
changed. Otherwise it totally would have.
v. Unless T abandons or surrenders premises, L may not use self-help. Must go
to the courts.
vi. Berg reflects modern view of self-help, but not yet majority rule.
vii. Every state provides some form of summary proceeding. Typically only
require a few days notice to T. Anything extrinsic to possession normally not
addressed. Many states permit T to use self-help (e.g., withhold rent) if L
doesnt maintain premises, and so summary proceedings for nonpayment can
be made. Courts have relied on availability of summary proceedings to
abrogate self-help. Avg. of 114 days from request of evictions to day
accomplished.
b. Sommer v. Kridel (NJ 1977)
i. P failed to make efforts to re-let an apt that D abandoned (never went into
possession).
ii. Is the L under a duty to mitigate damager by making reasonable efforts to relet an apartment wrongfully vacated by T?
iii. Yes. No-mitigation rule based on property view of lease lease is a property
interest which forecloses any control of property b landlord. But adopts
contract view of lease. Landlord does have duty to mitigate damages. L has
burden of showing reasonable efforts.
iv. Part of trend in landlord-tenant law to recognize contract law concepts.
v. Relevant cases:
28
29
30
v. Once warranty is breached, T must notify L and give him time to remedy
problem. If its not fixed, T can seek rescission, reformation, and damages.
Damages shall be difference between value of apt as warranted and apt as it is.
T can recover for discomfort and annoyance. T can withhold rent until
damages are calculated. T can deduct expenses of repair from rent. So
burden on bringing suit is on L. T can pursue punitive damages.
vi. Note that the implied warranty of habitability has exceptions in some
jurisdictions e.g., doesnt apply to casual Ls, like a professor who goes on
sabbatical; single-family residences excepted and isnt adopted by all states.
Most jurisdictions dont extend it to commercial properties.
vii. Standard varies, but usually the warranty is violated if a reasonable person
would not find it habitable. Continued loud noise or failure of a central air
conditioning system may be a violation.
viii. How are damages calculated?
(i) Hilder: Value of dwelling as warranted dwelling in defective condition.
(ii) NH: Agreed rent dwelling in defective condition.
(iii)
Percentage-reduction: agreed rent is reduced by percentage equal
to percentage lease-value lost by T as a result of Ls breach.
ix. Ts tend to ignore specific performance even though its available in principle.
x. Suppose maintenance staff goes on strike and city sanitation workers wont
cross picket lines. Trash piles up. L must bear the loss breach of IWH.
Park West Management Corp. v. Mitchell (NY 1979).
xi. The implied warranty of habitability only covers the basic minimums you
cant recover under it if, say, you pay for a luxury apt and dont get services
you expected. But you probably can recover under a contract action. Solow v.
Wellner (NY 1995).
e. Most states prohibit retaliatory actions by L (within, say, 180 days of a good faith
complaint). Its usually via a rebuttable presumption if certain conditions are
present. An alternative approach pursued by NY and other states is to permit L to
serve an eviction notice once repairs have been made, but require L to give T a
reasonable time to find other housing.
f. Note that this interacts with tort law in that some states impose a general duty of
care on Ls. But most states stick to the common law.
g. Duty of T not to commit waste is breached if T makes changes to affect a vital and
substantial portion of the premises, that would change its characteristic
appearance, the fundamental purpose of the erection, or the uses contemplated
or a change that would affect the very realty itself, extraordinary in scope and
effect, or unusual in expenditure. Pross v. Excelsior Cleaning & Dyeing Co. (NY
1919).
i. Of course, not a bright-line rule. E.g., no waste when T: replaced defective
ceiling with another one that didnt conform to code, installed light and
switch, attached wooden closet to wall, and put frame around window.
Rumiche Corp. v. Eisenreich (NY 1976).
ii. Ts duty to repair: Arose out of duty not to commit waste. At common law,
duty was to make repairs that would keep the building windtight and
31
32
33
34
(i) Shortly after city built sewer line, private sewer lines were built under Bs
large lot, extending from city line. Bs lot was then divided into three lots.
B sold them off. Houses were built. The house closest to the public line
wasnt so happy about the lines his basement flooded with sewage. It
wasnt obvious that there were lines under his house they were buried in
the ground.
(ii) Can an easement be created by implication when it was used by a previous
owner, yet was not readily visible to a party to the conveyance of the
property?
(iii)
Yes. This depends in part on the circumstances under which the
conveyance of land was made, including extent to which manner of proper
use may have been known by the parties. Each party assumed to know
about reasonably necessary uses that are apparent upon reasonably prudent
investigation. Easement may be implied for grantor or grantee on basis of
necessity alone.
(iv) Quasi-easement: owner can use one part of his land to benefit another part
of his land. (You cant just give an easement to yourself.) Benefiting part
of land: quasi-dominant tenement. This easement arises from the
circumstances not the language of the conveyance.
(v) Here, P cant claim he had no notice. P made careful inspection of
property and knew the house had modern plumbing and needed to drain
into a sewer. Since he had notice of the lateral sewer, the easement was
apparent.
(vi) If dominant and servient tenements come under the same ownership, the
easement is extinguished. If theyre redivided, another easement can arise
if the circumstances at the time indicate a new easement was intended.
iii. Easement by necessity
(i) Othen v. Rosier (TX 1950)
1. D had a plot next to a road. P had landlocked plot adjacent to Ds
property. P used roadway on Ds property to access the road. D
blocked it off. All of these lots used to be owned by H.
2. Is there an EBN here?
3. No. Must show that there was unity of ownership between dominant
and servient estates, that easement is a necessity and not a
convenience, and that necessity existed at time the estates were
severed. Dominant estate has burden of proof.
4. There was unity of ownership here; but at the time the use of the road
was a mere convenience. Other tracts of land could have been crossed.
P hasnt made adequate showing. Mere fact that parcel is landlocked
does not create EBN.
5. Is there an easement by prescription? No. The use of the easement
was not adverse. This was initially a permissive use.
(ii) Most courts require strict necessity. Others will grant an EBN when
theres access to the land, but it would be inadequate, difficult, or costly.
(iii)
What happens if the owner of five parcels, one of which is
landlocked, dies intestate and his kids fight over who has to have the
35
36
37
(i) Vertical runs with an estate in land. Burden doesnt extend to adverse
possessor, because its a new title.
1. Restatement 3d rejects vertical privity requirement. Instead it draws a
distinction between affirmative and negative covenants. Negative
covenants are treated like easements for succession purposes runs to
all subsequent possessors and owners of the burdened and benefited
land. Affirmative covenants extend to person who succeed estates of
the same duration as were held by original parties to the covenant =
traditional privity requirements. Burdens run to adverse possessors.
Lessees must perform only covenants that are more reasonably
performed by her than the L. Life tenants succeed to burdens but
liability limited to value of life estate.
(ii) Horizontal only required for burden classic situation is where
developer sells home to individual purchasers
1. You can also have a straw transaction where you convey to X (say,
lawyer) and reconvey to parties to agreement with covenant in deed.
g. Suppose B promises A hell only use his property for residential purposes. B sells
to C. A sells to D.
i. A sues B when B builds a factory: This is just a contract action. Pretty
obvious.
ii. A sues C when C builds a factory: A must allege that the burden runs to C,
since C is not an original party.
iii. D sues B when B builds a factory: D must allege the benefit runs to D, since D
is not the original party.
iv. D sues C when C builds a factory: D must allege that the burden and benefit
run.
2. Covenants enforceable in equity
a. Privity not required, except for the benefit, which runs to all assignees (adverse
possessors unclear hasnt been litigated) but everything else is.
Enforceability at law is irrelevant.
i. What about 3d parties? In some jurisdiction, 3d party beneficiaries cant
enforce.
ii. Property theory of equitable servitudes: Its an interest in land not an estate
in land like real covenants. Basically this is like a negative easement.
Supports theory that if government condemns property, it must compensate
beneficiaries for loss of covenant. Should they only be contract rights? The
property theory has prevailed over the contract theory.
iii. Suppose O promises A without any consideration from A. O sells to B. B
knows of the promise and violates it. A can probably enjoin B.
iv. Note that a P can always sell an injunction to D P determines damages rather
than a jury.
v. Since unification of law and equity in most states, it really doesnt matter how
its classified. You can get damages for equitable actions. Restatement 3d
rejects equity/law distinction. Everything is a covenant running with the land.
b. Tulk v. Moxhay (England 1848)
38
i. P conveyed to E; title included covenant that E, his heirs, and assigns would
maintain garden, without any buildings. Property eventually passed to D; title
didnt contain covenant. D conceded that he had notice of covenant. D tried
to build buildings.
ii. Is a covenant enforceable against a purchaser of land when that purchaser
acquired the land with knowledge of the covenant?
iii. Yes. A covenant is enforceable in equity against a person who purchases land
with notice of the covenant. D had notice. He probably paid less for land
because of the covenant. If he can just go and build, thats not fair. Hed be
unjustly enriched he could resell land at a higher price.
3. Creation of covenants
a. Real covenant can only be created by a written instrument signed by the
covenantor. An equitable servitude can be implied in equity under certain limited
circumstances. Cannot be obtained by prescription.
b. Sanborn v. McLean (MI 1925)
i. Development which was entirely residential all lots were residential. Ms
sold some lots with residential-only restrictions in deed. Passed on to D
without the covenant contained in deed. Neighbor P tried to enjoin Ds.
ii. Is there a covenant here?
iii. Yes. An equitable servitude can be implied on a lot, even when the servitude
is not created by a written instrument, if there is a scheme for development of
a residential subdivision and the purchaser of the lot has notice of it.
iv. Ms included covenants for the benefit of the lots they retained. They were
subject to them, too. Theyre reciprocal negative easements. Can be enforced
by P if Ds had notice.
v. There was intent, there was touch and concern. Was there notice? Inquiry
notice is looking around to get an idea. Here, theres been inquiry notice its
pretty obvious!
vi. Sufficient notice when not obvious by inquiry notice, but deeds of
surrounding properties including restrictions recorded in public record.
McQuade v. Wilcox (MI 1921).
vii. Actual notice is probably too tough a standard to prove.
c. Neponsit Property Owners Association, Inc. v. Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank
(NY 1938)
i. N sold to Deyers; deed contained covenant that property would be subjected
to an annual fee for infrastructure maintenance (e.g., roads, gardens, etc. in
housing development), payable to P (an assignee of N). D acquired title to
Deyers property title mentioned covenant.
ii. Does the covenant touch and concern the land?
iii. Yes. Whats determinative is the degree to which the covenant substantially
affects the legal rights of the parties to the covenant. This gave the owners
some right to enjoy common property with other nearby owners.
iv. Is there privity between P and D? Yes. P was designed as a convenience to
advance common interests of property owners. SO essentially a privity of
estate between P and D.
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
vi. Rehnquist (Dissenting): this isnt like a typical zoning restriction where there
are benefits and burdens on restricted properties. No reciprocity of advantage.
Remand to see whether transferable development rights are just compensation.
vii. Transferable development rights: because of the regulation, the city gives P1
the right to violate zoning laws in other areas with buildings they own or the
right to sell the TDRs. This serves to ease the burden of regulation so that the
court will find that does not amount to a taking.
viii. Distinct investment-backed expectations have been very puzzling. Some
courts have read them out of takings law by finding expectations frustrated
only when all economically viable uses of the land are frustrated. Others have
found DIBE only in instances when regulations interfered with investments
that have already been made.
47