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Real property

In English common law, real property, real estate, immovable property or, solely in the US and Canada, realty, is land which is the property of some person and all structures (also called improvements or fixtures) integrated with or affixed to the land, including crops, buildings, machinery, wells, dams, ponds, mines, canals, and roads, among other things. The term is historic, arising from the now-discontinued form of action, which distinguished between real property disputes and personal property disputes. Personal property, or personalty, was, and continues to be, all property that is not real property.

In countries with personal ownership of real property, civil law protects the status of real property in real-estate markets, where estate agents work in the market of buying and selling real estate. Scottish civil law calls real property "heritable property", and in French-based law, it is called immobilier ("immovable property").

Historical background

The word "real" derives from Latin res ("thing"). Under European civil law, a lawsuit that seeks official recognition of a property right is known as an actio in rem (action in relation to a thing). This contrasts with an actio in personam in which the plaintiff seeks relief for the actions of a particular person. The distinction can be subtle; the medieval action of novel disseisin, although aimed at repossessing land, was not an actio in rem because it was brought against the alleged dispossessor.[1]

Henry de Bracton's Treatise on the Laws and Customs of England is credited with giving "real property" its peculiar meaning in English law. After discussing the distinction in civil law, Bracton proposed that actions for movable property were inherently actions for relief, and that therefore an actio in rem could be brought only upon immovable property.[2][3] This view is not accepted in continental civil law, but can be understood in the context of legal developments during Bracton's lifetime. In thirteenth-century England the courts of canon law claimed broad authority to interpret wills, but inheritance of land remained a matter for the royal courts. Laws governing the conveyance of land and that of movable personal property then developed along different paths.[4]

In modern legal systems derived from English common law, classification of property as real or personal may vary somewhat according to jurisdiction or, even within jurisdictions, according to purpose, as in defining whether and how the property may be taxed. Houseboats, for example, occupy a gray area between personal and real property, and may be treated as either according to jurisdiction and circumstance.

Bethell (1998) contains much information on the historical evolution of real property and property rights.

Characteristics of real property

Immobility

Real property is immobile, preventing it from moving to a better market. Landlords are incapable of moving their physical land to the desired location, such as to another city for sale. To benefit from using parcels of land, users must travel from location to location to increase utility, therefore, location is a large component of a real property's value.[5]

Externalities

Changes that take place nearby will directly affect the real property’s value. Real property is vulnerable to externalities due to its immobile nature. External factors outside of the real property will affect the value of the real property, for example, the noises that neighboring people and construction sites produce.

Development

A location of desired resources will draw attention to the location. Natural locational attractions include water supply, climate, soil fertility, water frontage, and mineral deposits. As the area develops revolving around such natural resources, these developments become components to look for when determining land use and real property values. The surrounding development and proximity, such as markets and transportation routes, will also determine the value of the real property.

Supply of Urban Land

Although the amount of land in terms of the surface area is fixed, the supply of urban land is often not limited due to the nature of how urban land is supplied. By bidding land away from non-urban uses of land, such as farmland, will increase urban land supply. Urban land value is expected to exceed that of agricultural land value in the long run, therefore, creating the incentive to convert non-urban land to urban land. The value of the land is directly associated with its use. Zoning regulations regarding multi-story development are modified to intensify the use of cities, instead of occupying more physical space.

Identification of real property

To be of any value, a claim to any property must be accompanied by a verifiable and legal property description. Such a description usually makes use of natural or man-made boundaries such as seacoasts, rivers, streams, the crests of ridges, lakeshores, highways, roads, and railroad tracks or purpose-built markers such as cairns, surveyor's posts, iron pins or pipes, concrete monuments, fences, official government surveying marks (such as ones affixed by the National Geodetic Survey), and so forth. In many cases, a description refers to one or more lots on a plat, a map of property boundaries kept in public records.

These legal descriptions are usually described in two different ways – metes & bounds, and lot & block. A third way is the Public Land Survey System,[6] as used in the United States.

  • Metes. The term "metes" refers to a boundary defined by the measurement of each straight run, specified by a distance between the terminal points, and orientation or direction. A direction may be a simple compass bearing (magnetic), or a more precise orientation determined by accurate survey methods.
  • Bounds. The term "bounds" refers to a more general boundary description, the abuttals and boundaries, such as along a certain watercourse, a stone wall, an adjoining public roadway, an adjoining property owner, or an existing building. The system is often used to define larger pieces of property (e.g. farms), and political subdivisions (e.g. town boundaries) where the precise definition is not required or would be far too expensive, or previously designated boundaries can be incorporated into the description.
  • The Lot & Block system is perhaps the simplest of the three main survey systems to understand. For a legal description in the Lot and Block system a description must identify:
    • the individual lot,
    • the block in which the lot is located, if applicable,
    • a reference to a platted subdivision or a phase thereof,
    • a reference to find the cited plat map (i.e., a page and/or volume number), and
    • a description of the map's place of official recording (e.g., recorded in the files of the County Engineer).
  •  
    The Public Land Survey System (PLSS) is the surveying method developed and used in the United States to divide real property for sale and settling. The PLSS used nominally rectangular shapes to divide. The basic unit in the PLSS is the Section of land, typically 1-mile square. A 6 x 6-mile grid of sections of landform is what is referred to as a Township. Townships are laid out east and west of a Principal Meridian, and north and south of a Baseline.

Estates and ownership interests defined

The law recognizes different sorts of interests called estates, in real property. The type of estate is usually determined by the language of the deed, lease, bill of sale, will, land grant, etc., through which the estate was acquired. Estates are distinguished by the varying property rights that vest in each and determine the duration and transferability of the various estates. A party enjoying an estate is called a "tenant".

Some important types of estates in the land include:

  • Fee simple: An estate of indefinite duration, that can be freely transferred. The most common and perhaps most absolute type of estate, under which the tenant enjoys the greatest discretion over the disposal of the property.
  • Fee simple conditional: An estate lasting forever as long as one or more conditions stipulated by the deed's grantor does not occur. If such a condition does occur, the property reverts to the grantor, or a remainder interest is passed on to a third party.
  • Fee tail: An estate which, upon the death of the tenant, is transferred to his or her heirs.
  • Life estate: An estate lasting for the natural life of the grantee, called a "life tenant". If a life estate can be sold, a sale does not change its duration, which is limited by the natural life of the original grantee.
  • A life estate per autre vie is held by one person for the natural life of another person. Such an estate may arise if the original life tenant sells her life estate to another, or if the life estate is originally granted per autre vie.
  • Leasehold: An estate of limited-term, as set out in a contract, called a lease, between the party, granted the leasehold, called the lessee, and another party, called the lessor, having a longer estate in the property. For example, an apartment-dweller with a one-year lease has a leasehold estate in her apartment. Lessees typically agree to pay a stated rent to the lessor. Though a leasehold relates to real property, the leasehold interest is historically classified as personal property.

A tenant enjoying an undivided estate in some property after the termination of some estate of limited-term is said to have a "future interest". Two important types of future interests are:

  • Reversion: A reversion arises when a tenant grants an estate of the lesser maximum term than his own. Ownership of the land returns to the original tenant when the grantee's estate expires. The original tenant's future interest is a reversion.
  • Remainder: A remainder arises when a tenant with a fee simple grants someone a life estate or conditional fee simple, and specifies a third party to whom the land goes when the life estate ends or the condition occurs. The third party is said to have a remainder. The third-party may have a legal right to limit the life tenant's use of the land.

Estates may be held jointly as joint tenants with rights of survivorship or as tenants in common. The difference between these two types of joint ownership of an estate in land is basically the inheritability of the estate and the shares of interest that each tenant owns.

In a joint tenancy with rights of survivorship deed or JTWROS, the death of one tenant means that the surviving tenants become the sole owners of the estate. Nothing passes to the heirs of the deceased tenant. In some jurisdictions, the specific words "with right of survivorship" must be used, or the tenancy will assume to be tenants in common without rights of survivorship. The co-owners always take a JTWROS deed in equal shares, so each tenant must own an equal share of the property regardless of any contribution to the purchase price. If the property is someday sold or subdivided, the proceeds must be distributed equally with no credits given for any excess that anyone co-owner may have contributed to purchase the property.

The death of a co-owner of tenants in common (TIC) deed will have a heritable portion of the estate in proportion to his ownership interest which is presumed to be equal among all tenants unless otherwise stated in the transfer deed. However, if TIC property is sold or subdivided, in some States, Provinces, etc., a credit can be automatically made for unequal contributions to the purchase price (unlike a partition of a JTWROS deed).

Real property may be owned jointly with several tenants, through devices such as the condominium, housing cooperative, and building cooperative.

Bundle of Rights

Real property is unique because there are multiple rights associated with each piece of property. For example, most U.S. jurisdictions recognized the following rights: right to sell; right to lease; right to acquire minerals, gas, oil, etc. within the land; right to use; right to possess; right to develop; etc. These multiple rights are important because owners of the real property can generally do what they choose with each right. For example, the owner could choose to keep all the rights but lease the right to drill for oil to an oil company, or the owner could choose to keep all the rights but lease the property to a tenant. In other words, the owner can elect to keep, lease or sell the rights to the land.

Other Ownership types

  • Allodial title: Real property that is independent of any superior landlord. Allodium is "Land held absolutely in one's own right, and not of any lord or superior; land not subject to feudal duties or burdens. An estate held by absolute ownership, without recognizing any superior to whom any duty is due on account thereof."[7]

Jurisdictional peculiarities

In the law of almost every country, the state is the ultimate owner of all land under its jurisdiction, because it is the sovereign, or supreme lawmaking authority. Physical and corporate persons do not have allodial title; they do not own land but only enjoy estates in the land, also known as "equitable interests".[citation needed]

Australia and New Zealand

In many countries, the Torrens title system of real estate ownership is managed and guaranteed by the government and replaces cumbersome tracing of ownership.[citation needed] The Torrens title system operates on the principle of "title by registration" (i.e. the indefeasibility of a registered interest) rather than "registration of title". The system does away with the need for a chain of title (i.e. tracing title through a series of documents) and does away with the conveyancing costs of such searches. The State guarantees title and is usually supported by a compensation scheme for those who lose their title due to the State's operation. It has been in practice in all Australian states and New Zealand since between 1858 and 1875, has more recently been extended to strata title, and has been adopted by many states, provinces and countries, and in modified form in 9 states of the US.

United Kingdom

In the United Kingdom, The Crown is held to be the ultimate owner of all real property in the realm. This fact is material when, for example, the property has been disclaimed by its erstwhile owner, in which case the law of escheat applies. In some other jurisdictions (not including the United States), real property is held absolutely.

England and Wales

English law has retained the common law distinction between real property and personal property, whereas the civil law distinguishes between "movable" and "immovable" property. In English law, real property is not confined to the ownership of property and the buildings sited thereon – often referred to as "land". Real property also includes many legal relationships between individuals or owners of the land that are purely conceptual. One such relationship is the easement, where the owner of one property has the right to pass over a neighboring property. Another is the various "incorporeal hereditaments", such as profits-à-Prendre, where an individual may have the right to take crops from land that is part of another's estate.

English law retains several forms of property that are largely unknown in other common law jurisdictions such as the advowson, chancel repair liability and lordships of the manor. In the early common law, these are all classified as real property, as they would have been protected by real actions.

United States

Each U.S. State except Louisiana has its own laws governing real property and the estates therein, grounded in the common law. In Arizona,[citation needed] real property is generally defined as land and the things permanently attached to the land. Things that are permanently attached to the land, which also can be referred to as improvements, include homes, garages, and buildings. Manufactured homes can obtain an affidavit of affixture.

Economic aspects of real property

Land use, land valuation, and the determination of the incomes of landowners are among the oldest questions in economic theory. Land is an essential input (a factor of production) for agriculture, and agriculture is by far the most important economic activity in pre-industrial societies. With the advent of industrialization, important new uses for land emerge, as sites for factories, warehouses, offices, and urban agglomerations. Also, the value of the real property taking the form of man-made structures and machinery increases relative to the value of the land alone. The concept of the real property eventually comes to encompass effectively all forms of tangible fixed capital. with the rise of extractive industries, real property comes to encompass natural capital. With the rise of tourism and leisure, real property comes to include scenic and other amenity values.

Starting in the 1960s, as part of the emerging field of law and economics, economists and legal scholars began to study the property rights enjoyed by tenants under the various estates and the economic benefits and costs of the various estates. This resulted in a much-improved understanding of the:

  • Property rights enjoyed by tenants under the various estates. These include the right to:
    • Decide how a piece of real property is used;
    • Exclude others from enjoying the property;
    • Transfer (alienate) some or all of these rights to others on mutually agreeable terms;
  • Nature and consequences of transaction costs when changing and transferring estates.

For an introduction to the economic analysis of property law, see Shavell (2004), and Cooter and Ulen (2003). For a collection of related scholarly articles, see Epstein (2007). Ellickson (1993) broadens the economic analysis of real property with a variety of facts drawn from history and ethnography.

See also

References

  1. ^ Maitland, F. W. (1909). The Forms of Action at Common Law.
  2. ^ Street, Thomas A. (1999). The Theory and Development of Common-law Actions.
  3. ^ Bracton, Henry de. Tractatus de legibus et consuetudinibus Anglie. f. 102.
  4. ^ Pollock, Frederick; Maitland, Frederic William (1923). The History of English Law Before the Time of Edward I. Vol. 1.
  5. ^ Division., Real Estate Council of British Columbia. The University of British Columbia. Real Estate. Real estate trading services licensing course manual. UBC Real Estate Division. OCLC 1083338764.
  6. ^ "BLM Manual of Surveying Instructions For the Survey of the Public Lands of the United States". www.blmsurveymanual.org. Retrieved 2020-05-03.
  7. ^ Black, Henry Campbell (1910). Black's Law Dictionary – 2nd Edition.

Further reading

Overview of real property

  • Schram, Joseph F., 2006. Real Estate Appraisal, Rockwell Publishing.
  • Moore, Geoff., 2005. Essential Real Property, Psychology Press.

The law of real property

  • Stoebuck, W. B., and Dale A. Whitman, 2000. The Law of Property, 3rd. ed. St. Paul MN: West Group Publishing.
  • Thomas, David A., ed., 1996. Thompson on Real Property. Charlottesville VA: Michie Co.

Analysis of the law of real property

  • Ackerman, B., R. Ellickson, and C.M. Rose, 2002. Perspectives on Property Law, 3rd ed. Aspen Law and Business.
  • Tom Bethell, 1998. Noblest Triumph: Property and Prosperity through the Ages. St Martin's Press. For laypeople.
  • Robert Cooter, and Thomas Ulen, 2003. Law and Economics, 4th. ed. Addison-Wesley. Chpts. 4,5. Easier text.
  • Ellickson, Robert, 1993, "," Yale Law Journal 102: 1315–1400.
  • Richard Epstein, ed., 2007, Economics of Property Law. Edward Elgar. An anthology of articles, mostly from the law literature.
  • Shavell, Steven, 2004. Foundations of Economic Analysis of Law. Harvard Univ. Press. Chpts. 2–5. Harder text; extensive references.
  • Jeremy Waldron, 1988. The Right to Private Property. Oxford Univ. Press.
  • Oswaldo D. Agcaoili, ISBN 971-23-4501-7, ed. 2006, Property Registration Code. Agcaoili. Land Titles and Deeds: Property Law and Cases in the Philippines.

real, property, realty, redirects, here, confused, with, reality, this, article, about, legal, concept, business, selling, leasing, real, property, real, estate, business, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, in. Realty redirects here Not to be confused with reality This article is about the legal concept For the business of selling and leasing real property see real estate business This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations October 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message In English common law real property real estate immovable property or solely in the US and Canada realty is land which is the property of some person and all structures also called improvements or fixtures integrated with or affixed to the land including crops buildings machinery wells dams ponds mines canals and roads among other things The term is historic arising from the now discontinued form of action which distinguished between real property disputes and personal property disputes Personal property or personalty was and continues to be all property that is not real property In countries with personal ownership of real property civil law protects the status of real property in real estate markets where estate agents work in the market of buying and selling real estate Scottish civil law calls real property heritable property and in French based law it is called immobilier immovable property Contents 1 Historical background 2 Characteristics of real property 2 1 Immobility 2 2 Externalities 2 3 Development 2 4 Supply of Urban Land 3 Identification of real property 4 Estates and ownership interests defined 4 1 Bundle of Rights 4 2 Other Ownership types 5 Jurisdictional peculiarities 5 1 Australia and New Zealand 5 2 United Kingdom 5 2 1 England and Wales 5 3 United States 6 Economic aspects of real property 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 9 1 Overview of real property 9 2 The law of real property 9 3 Analysis of the law of real propertyHistorical background EditThe word real derives from Latin res thing Under European civil law a lawsuit that seeks official recognition of a property right is known as an actio in rem action in relation to a thing This contrasts with an actio in personam in which the plaintiff seeks relief for the actions of a particular person The distinction can be subtle the medieval action of novel disseisin although aimed at repossessing land was not an actio in rem because it was brought against the alleged dispossessor 1 Henry de Bracton s Treatise on the Laws and Customs of England is credited with giving real property its peculiar meaning in English law After discussing the distinction in civil law Bracton proposed that actions for movable property were inherently actions for relief and that therefore an actio in rem could be brought only upon immovable property 2 3 This view is not accepted in continental civil law but can be understood in the context of legal developments during Bracton s lifetime In thirteenth century England the courts of canon law claimed broad authority to interpret wills but inheritance of land remained a matter for the royal courts Laws governing the conveyance of land and that of movable personal property then developed along different paths 4 In modern legal systems derived from English common law classification of property as real or personal may vary somewhat according to jurisdiction or even within jurisdictions according to purpose as in defining whether and how the property may be taxed Houseboats for example occupy a gray area between personal and real property and may be treated as either according to jurisdiction and circumstance Bethell 1998 contains much information on the historical evolution of real property and property rights Characteristics of real property EditImmobility Edit Real property is immobile preventing it from moving to a better market Landlords are incapable of moving their physical land to the desired location such as to another city for sale To benefit from using parcels of land users must travel from location to location to increase utility therefore location is a large component of a real property s value 5 Externalities Edit Changes that take place nearby will directly affect the real property s value Real property is vulnerable to externalities due to its immobile nature External factors outside of the real property will affect the value of the real property for example the noises that neighboring people and construction sites produce Development Edit A location of desired resources will draw attention to the location Natural locational attractions include water supply climate soil fertility water frontage and mineral deposits As the area develops revolving around such natural resources these developments become components to look for when determining land use and real property values The surrounding development and proximity such as markets and transportation routes will also determine the value of the real property Supply of Urban Land Edit Although the amount of land in terms of the surface area is fixed the supply of urban land is often not limited due to the nature of how urban land is supplied By bidding land away from non urban uses of land such as farmland will increase urban land supply Urban land value is expected to exceed that of agricultural land value in the long run therefore creating the incentive to convert non urban land to urban land The value of the land is directly associated with its use Zoning regulations regarding multi story development are modified to intensify the use of cities instead of occupying more physical space Identification of real property EditTo be of any value a claim to any property must be accompanied by a verifiable and legal property description Such a description usually makes use of natural or man made boundaries such as seacoasts rivers streams the crests of ridges lakeshores highways roads and railroad tracks or purpose built markers such as cairns surveyor s posts iron pins or pipes concrete monuments fences official government surveying marks such as ones affixed by the National Geodetic Survey and so forth In many cases a description refers to one or more lots on a plat a map of property boundaries kept in public records These legal descriptions are usually described in two different ways metes amp bounds and lot amp block A third way is the Public Land Survey System 6 as used in the United States Metes The term metes refers to a boundary defined by the measurement of each straight run specified by a distance between the terminal points and orientation or direction A direction may be a simple compass bearing magnetic or a more precise orientation determined by accurate survey methods Bounds The term bounds refers to a more general boundary description the abuttals and boundaries such as along a certain watercourse a stone wall an adjoining public roadway an adjoining property owner or an existing building The system is often used to define larger pieces of property e g farms and political subdivisions e g town boundaries where the precise definition is not required or would be far too expensive or previously designated boundaries can be incorporated into the description The Lot amp Block system is perhaps the simplest of the three main survey systems to understand For a legal description in the Lot and Block system a description must identify the individual lot the block in which the lot is located if applicable a reference to a platted subdivision or a phase thereof a reference to find the cited plat map i e a page and or volume number and a description of the map s place of official recording e g recorded in the files of the County Engineer Principal meridians and Baselines governing the United States Public Land Survey System The Public Land Survey System PLSS is the surveying method developed and used in the United States to divide real property for sale and settling The PLSS used nominally rectangular shapes to divide The basic unit in the PLSS is the Section of land typically 1 mile square A 6 x 6 mile grid of sections of landform is what is referred to as a Township Townships are laid out east and west of a Principal Meridian and north and south of a Baseline Estates and ownership interests defined EditThe law recognizes different sorts of interests called estates in real property The type of estate is usually determined by the language of the deed lease bill of sale will land grant etc through which the estate was acquired Estates are distinguished by the varying property rights that vest in each and determine the duration and transferability of the various estates A party enjoying an estate is called a tenant Some important types of estates in the land include Fee simple An estate of indefinite duration that can be freely transferred The most common and perhaps most absolute type of estate under which the tenant enjoys the greatest discretion over the disposal of the property Fee simple conditional An estate lasting forever as long as one or more conditions stipulated by the deed s grantor does not occur If such a condition does occur the property reverts to the grantor or a remainder interest is passed on to a third party Fee tail An estate which upon the death of the tenant is transferred to his or her heirs Life estate An estate lasting for the natural life of the grantee called a life tenant If a life estate can be sold a sale does not change its duration which is limited by the natural life of the original grantee A life estate per autre vie is held by one person for the natural life of another person Such an estate may arise if the original life tenant sells her life estate to another or if the life estate is originally granted per autre vie Leasehold An estate of limited term as set out in a contract called a lease between the party granted the leasehold called the lessee and another party called the lessor having a longer estate in the property For example an apartment dweller with a one year lease has a leasehold estate in her apartment Lessees typically agree to pay a stated rent to the lessor Though a leasehold relates to real property the leasehold interest is historically classified as personal property A tenant enjoying an undivided estate in some property after the termination of some estate of limited term is said to have a future interest Two important types of future interests are Reversion A reversion arises when a tenant grants an estate of the lesser maximum term than his own Ownership of the land returns to the original tenant when the grantee s estate expires The original tenant s future interest is a reversion Remainder A remainder arises when a tenant with a fee simple grants someone a life estate or conditional fee simple and specifies a third party to whom the land goes when the life estate ends or the condition occurs The third party is said to have a remainder The third party may have a legal right to limit the life tenant s use of the land Estates may be held jointly as joint tenants with rights of survivorship or as tenants in common The difference between these two types of joint ownership of an estate in land is basically the inheritability of the estate and the shares of interest that each tenant owns In a joint tenancy with rights of survivorship deed or JTWROS the death of one tenant means that the surviving tenants become the sole owners of the estate Nothing passes to the heirs of the deceased tenant In some jurisdictions the specific words with right of survivorship must be used or the tenancy will assume to be tenants in common without rights of survivorship The co owners always take a JTWROS deed in equal shares so each tenant must own an equal share of the property regardless of any contribution to the purchase price If the property is someday sold or subdivided the proceeds must be distributed equally with no credits given for any excess that anyone co owner may have contributed to purchase the property The death of a co owner of tenants in common TIC deed will have a heritable portion of the estate in proportion to his ownership interest which is presumed to be equal among all tenants unless otherwise stated in the transfer deed However if TIC property is sold or subdivided in some States Provinces etc a credit can be automatically made for unequal contributions to the purchase price unlike a partition of a JTWROS deed Real property may be owned jointly with several tenants through devices such as the condominium housing cooperative and building cooperative Bundle of Rights Edit Real property is unique because there are multiple rights associated with each piece of property For example most U S jurisdictions recognized the following rights right to sell right to lease right to acquire minerals gas oil etc within the land right to use right to possess right to develop etc These multiple rights are important because owners of the real property can generally do what they choose with each right For example the owner could choose to keep all the rights but lease the right to drill for oil to an oil company or the owner could choose to keep all the rights but lease the property to a tenant In other words the owner can elect to keep lease or sell the rights to the land Other Ownership types Edit Allodial title Real property that is independent of any superior landlord Allodium is Land held absolutely in one s own right and not of any lord or superior land not subject to feudal duties or burdens An estate held by absolute ownership without recognizing any superior to whom any duty is due on account thereof 7 Jurisdictional peculiarities EditIn the law of almost every country the state is the ultimate owner of all land under its jurisdiction because it is the sovereign or supreme lawmaking authority Physical and corporate persons do not have allodial title they do not own land but only enjoy estates in the land also known as equitable interests citation needed Australia and New Zealand Edit In many countries the Torrens title system of real estate ownership is managed and guaranteed by the government and replaces cumbersome tracing of ownership citation needed The Torrens title system operates on the principle of title by registration i e the indefeasibility of a registered interest rather than registration of title The system does away with the need for a chain of title i e tracing title through a series of documents and does away with the conveyancing costs of such searches The State guarantees title and is usually supported by a compensation scheme for those who lose their title due to the State s operation It has been in practice in all Australian states and New Zealand since between 1858 and 1875 has more recently been extended to strata title and has been adopted by many states provinces and countries and in modified form in 9 states of the US United Kingdom Edit In the United Kingdom The Crown is held to be the ultimate owner of all real property in the realm This fact is material when for example the property has been disclaimed by its erstwhile owner in which case the law of escheat applies In some other jurisdictions not including the United States real property is held absolutely England and Wales Edit English law has retained the common law distinction between real property and personal property whereas the civil law distinguishes between movable and immovable property In English law real property is not confined to the ownership of property and the buildings sited thereon often referred to as land Real property also includes many legal relationships between individuals or owners of the land that are purely conceptual One such relationship is the easement where the owner of one property has the right to pass over a neighboring property Another is the various incorporeal hereditaments such as profits a Prendre where an individual may have the right to take crops from land that is part of another s estate English law retains several forms of property that are largely unknown in other common law jurisdictions such as the advowson chancel repair liability and lordships of the manor In the early common law these are all classified as real property as they would have been protected by real actions United States Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2008 Each U S State except Louisiana has its own laws governing real property and the estates therein grounded in the common law In Arizona citation needed real property is generally defined as land and the things permanently attached to the land Things that are permanently attached to the land which also can be referred to as improvements include homes garages and buildings Manufactured homes can obtain an affidavit of affixture Economic aspects of real property EditLand use land valuation and the determination of the incomes of landowners are among the oldest questions in economic theory Land is an essential input a factor of production for agriculture and agriculture is by far the most important economic activity in pre industrial societies With the advent of industrialization important new uses for land emerge as sites for factories warehouses offices and urban agglomerations Also the value of the real property taking the form of man made structures and machinery increases relative to the value of the land alone The concept of the real property eventually comes to encompass effectively all forms of tangible fixed capital with the rise of extractive industries real property comes to encompass natural capital With the rise of tourism and leisure real property comes to include scenic and other amenity values Starting in the 1960s as part of the emerging field of law and economics economists and legal scholars began to study the property rights enjoyed by tenants under the various estates and the economic benefits and costs of the various estates This resulted in a much improved understanding of the Property rights enjoyed by tenants under the various estates These include the right to Decide how a piece of real property is used Exclude others from enjoying the property Transfer alienate some or all of these rights to others on mutually agreeable terms Nature and consequences of transaction costs when changing and transferring estates For an introduction to the economic analysis of property law see Shavell 2004 and Cooter and Ulen 2003 For a collection of related scholarly articles see Epstein 2007 Ellickson 1993 broadens the economic analysis of real property with a variety of facts drawn from history and ethnography See also EditBenefice Fiefdom Land ownership in Canada Land tenure Landlord Mesne assignment Mineral rights Real estate The Land ReportReferences Edit Maitland F W 1909 The Forms of Action at Common Law Street Thomas A 1999 The Theory and Development of Common law Actions Bracton Henry de Tractatus de legibus et consuetudinibus Anglie f 102 Pollock Frederick Maitland Frederic William 1923 The History of English Law Before the Time of Edward I Vol 1 Division Real Estate Council of British Columbia The University of British Columbia Real Estate Real estate trading services licensing course manual UBC Real Estate Division OCLC 1083338764 BLM Manual of Surveying Instructions For the Survey of the Public Lands of the United States www blmsurveymanual org Retrieved 2020 05 03 Black Henry Campbell 1910 Black s Law Dictionary 2nd Edition Further reading Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Realty Overview of real property Edit Schram Joseph F 2006 Real Estate Appraisal Rockwell Publishing Moore Geoff 2005 Essential Real Property Psychology Press The law of real property Edit Stoebuck W B and Dale A Whitman 2000 The Law of Property 3rd ed St Paul MN West Group Publishing Thomas David A ed 1996 Thompson on Real Property Charlottesville VA Michie Co Analysis of the law of real property Edit Ackerman B R Ellickson and C M Rose 2002 Perspectives on Property Law 3rd ed Aspen Law and Business Tom Bethell 1998 Noblest Triumph Property and Prosperity through the Ages St Martin s Press For laypeople Robert Cooter and Thomas Ulen 2003 Law and Economics 4th ed Addison Wesley Chpts 4 5 Easier text Ellickson Robert 1993 Property in Land Yale Law Journal 102 1315 1400 Richard Epstein ed 2007 Economics of Property Law Edward Elgar An anthology of articles mostly from the law literature Shavell Steven 2004 Foundations of Economic Analysis of Law Harvard Univ Press Chpts 2 5 Harder text extensive references Jeremy Waldron 1988 The Right to Private Property Oxford Univ Press Oswaldo D Agcaoili ISBN 971 23 4501 7 ed 2006 Property Registration Code Agcaoili Land Titles and Deeds Property Law and Cases in the Philippines Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Real property amp oldid 1132978875, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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