Professional Documents
Culture Documents
(Reduced)
Concurrent Estates (3 Type) held by more than 1 all of which have right to enjoy &
possession of land
(1) Tenancy by Entirety (right of survivorship)
married couples ONLY OR convey to married couple presumed Tenancy by
Entirety
destroyed ONLY by death, divorce, mutual agreement, OR execution by joint
creditor
divorce automatically turns it into tenancy in common
NC has codified CL, thus TE is created when the conveyance is to (i) named man
& wife; (ii) named woman & husband; or (iii) 2 named persons whether or not identified
in conveyance as husband & wife, if at the time of conveyance they are legally married.
(2) Joint Tenancy (right of survivorship)
if 1 JT dies, other JT get property (her survivors do not succeed to it)
JT interest MUST be equal, identical, received at same time by same
instrument, with same right to possession.
NC four unities (time, title, interest, & possession) are required to create &
maintain JT. Unlike CL, NC recognizes JT w/ unequal interest where such interest
are clearly created; in event of ambiguity, NC presumes equal interest.
--> MUST have clear expression of right of survivorship otherwise its presumed
to be tenancy in common
either JT can convey interest and sever JT by sale, entering into contract for sale,
or transfer. Transferee takes as tenant in common
entering into contract for sale severs JT at time when contract was made b/c of
equitable conversion (equity regards as done that which ought to be done).
if more than 2 JT, convey by 1 ONLY destroy his JT and other 2 are still JT
Partition in Kind court physically divides property if in best interest of all
parties
Forced Sale if in best interest of all, court sales land and divides proceeds of
sale.
NC Forced SalePartition in Kind Favored by statute, a partition sale
may be ordered ONLY IF court finds by preponderance of evidence that actual
partition cannot be made w/o substantial injury to any interested party.
Substantial Injury: means that the fair market value of each co-tenants share in
any in-kind partition would be materially less than the money equivalent of each
share that would be obtained from the sale of the whole. Party seeking partition by
sale has burden of proof.
a will CANNOT convey or sever JT.
judgment lien CANNOT destroy JT
mortgage lien DOES NOT sever JT unless mortgage is foreclosed & prop. sold.
(mortgage lien in title theory state DOES sever JT)
(3) Tenancy in Common (no right of survivorship)
2+ ppl own w/ NO right of survivorship
each co-tenant owns an individual part & has right to possess the whole
interest is devisable, descendible, & alienable
courts presume TC
co-tenant out of possession CANNOT bring possessory action UNLESS he is
ousted (another co-tenant claims exclusive right of possession)
co-tenant in possession MUST share rents from 3 rd parties & net profits from
exploitation of land, i.e. mining.
each co-tenant responsible for their share of carrying cost, i.e. taxes, based upon
undivided share.
repairing co-tenant has right to contribution for reasonable & necessary repairs
provided he told other co-tenants of the need.
NO RIGHT to contribution for improvements ; however, @ partition sale co-tenant
would be entitled to a credit equal to any increase in value.
notice to terminate MUST (1) in writing AND (2) be one full period in advance
(e.g. 1 month notice if month-to-month) AND timed to terminate at end of period.
NC unless parties otherwise agree, year-to-year periodic tenancy may be
terminated by a notice given @ least one month prior to end of current year; monthto-month requires one week ; week-to-week requires two days.
Oral notice is sufficient; however, to be effective, notice must be
unequivocal.
(3) Tenancies @ Will
no fixed duration and terminable at will of LL or T
created by EXPRESS AGREEMENT, if not court WILL presume periodic tenancy
terminated by either party @ any time BUT reasonable demand to vacate is
usually needed.
if power to terminate w/ ONLY LL, court WILL imply same right to T
if power to terminate w/ ONLY T, court WILL NOT imply same right to LL.
(4) Tenancies @ Sufferance
is an holdover tenant AND last ONLY UNTIL LL takes steps to evict T. NO notice
required.
Holdover Doctrine if tenant holdover, LL MAY (i) evict OR (ii) bind to
new periodic tenancy. Commercial tenants MAY be held to a new year-to-year
tenancy.
Exceptions (i) T in possession for ONLY few hours; (ii) delay NOT
T fault; OR (iii) seasonal lease
Tenants Duties (3 types) AND LL Remedies for T Breach of Duty
(1) Duty to Repair
(when lease is silent) T MUST maintain premises AND make ordinary repairs
AND NOT commit voluntary, permissive, or ameliorative waste.
if T removes fixture (once movable chattel attached to premises), T
commits vol. waste
T MAY NOT remove fixture no matter she installed it b/c fixture pass w/
ownership of land
IF premises destroyed w/o fault of LL or T, NO waste BUT T has duty to continue
paying rent.
Most state now give T option to terminate lease.
NC if leased premises destroyed (i.e. cannot be made reasonably fit except
at an expense exceeding 1 years rent), absent negligence by T or lease provision,
AND use of building was the main inducement to the lease, T MAY surrender by
written notice w/n 10 days plus payment of all rent up to the date of the damages.
(when lease say T will repair) LL remains obligated to repair {except for
damages by T} b/c implied warranty of habitability. BUT T is responsible for
ordinary wear & tear unless covenant excluded it
nether LL nor paramount title holdover will interfere w/ T quiet enjoyment &
possession
breached by (i) actual wrongful eviction by LL; (ii) constructive eviction (by
substantial interference by LL; T gave LL notice of problem; AND T vacated
w/n reasonable time after LL failed to fix problem)
T constructively evicted CAN terminate lease AND sue for damages
(3) Implied Warranty of Habitability
premises MUST be fit for basic human habitation.
applies only to residential leases AND is non waivable
common triggers are (i) no heat in winter; (ii) no plumbing; (iii) no running
water
T remedies (i) terminate lease; (ii) make repairs & offset cost against
future rent; (iii) abate rent to an amount equal to fair rental value in view of
defect; OR (iv) remain, pay full rent, AND sue for damages.
(4) Retaliatory Eviction
LL MAY NOT terminate b/c T exercised legal rights, including reporting
housing/building code violations.
statutes presume retaliatory motive if LL acts w/n 90-180 days after T exercised
her right.
to overcome presumption, LL MUST show a valid reason for actions.
NC if LL sues to evict T w/n 12 months of Ts engaging in statutorily
protected activities, T is entitled to raise the defense. If court finds LL action was
retaliatory, it will deny request for ejectment but LL still entitled to rent.
Assignments & Subleases
Assignment complete transfer of entire remaining lease term.
in the lease, LL can prohibit T from assigning or subletting w/o LLs permission
this is WAIVED if LL was aware of assignment & did not object
once LL consent to 1 transfer, Dumpors Case provides LL waives as to
future transfers (unless LL expressly reserves it)
covenant prohibiting assignment DOES NOT prohibit subleasing and vice versa
if T assigns or sublets in violation of lease, transfer is OK but, LL MAY terminate
lease or sue for dmgs
assignee stands in shoes of original T, (i.e. assignee & LL privity of estate) and each
liable to each other for covenants that run w/ land (i.e. touch & concerns land) e.g. rent
covenant runs w/ land
original T liable to LL on original contract obligation to pay rent (i.e. privity of
contract)
NC if assignment has more than 3 years left to run, it must be in writing to satisfy SoF.
An express covenant in lease that allows for assignment or sublet only if T receives LL
permission is valid and NC law does not require that the lessors withholding of consent be
reasonable.
LL Assignment LL may assign rents & reversion interest AND T consent is not required.
once T have notice of assignment, T must recognize and pay rent to new owner
as LL
Sublease occurs when original T reserves time for herself, i.e. does not transfer entire lease
term.
sublesee usually pays rent to original T who then pays LL
sublesee not in privity of contract or estate w/ LL UNLESS sublesee expressly assumes
the covenants
LL may terminate main lease for nonpayment of rent
termination of main lease terminates sublease
sublesee MAY enforce implied warranty of habitability against LL
LL & T Tort Liability
LL liability
(1) common areasLL must maintain all common areas, e.g. hallways & stairways
(2) latent defect LL must WARN T of hidden defects that LL knows/should know about
(No duty to repair)
(3) assumption of repairs a LL who voluntarily makes repairs, MUST complete them w/
reasonable care. LL liable if repairs done negligently or give a deceptive appearance of
safety.
(4) short term lease of furnished dwelling LL liable for injuries resulting from any defect
whether or not LL knew of defect
(5) public use LL liable for injuries to public IF @ time of lease LL (a) knows/should know
of danger condition; (b) has reason to believe T MAY admit public b4 repairing condition;
AND (c) fails to repair condition.
Fixtures
Fixture is a chattel so affixed to land that it ceased being personal property & has become
part of realty
fixture passes w/ ownership of land
Divided Ownership Cases chattel is owned & brought to realty by someone other than
landowner
agreement b/w LL & T is controlling on whether an annexed chattel is a fixture.
Absent agreement, T deemed to lack intent to permanently improve the property
& MAY remove his annexed chattel IF removal does not substantially damage
premises OR destroy chattel.
annexed chattel MUST BE removed by end of lease OR w/n reasonable time after
Express Easement created by (1) in a writing (SoF applies); (2) signed by servient
(burdened) estate holder; & (3) satisfies deed formalities (adequate description of land involved)
Express easement by reservationwhen grantor/seller conveys land to another.
BUT reserves/retains right to continued use of land for designated purpose. Grantor can only
reserve easement for himself & not for another/3 rd party.
Scopeis controlled by terms of express easement. If ambiguous, court will
determine based on surrounding circumstances. Once scope is established, the holder CANNOT
unilaterally expand the scope through misuse/overuse. If holder misuses/overuses easement,
appropriate remedy is injunction.
Easement by Estoppel (created when someone cognizant of his own right keeps silent
in the knowledge that another will be innocently & ignorantly induced to make land purchase or
expend money/labor in reliance on the existence of an easement that doesnt actually exist.
Easement by Dedication (created when owner of land sets land/part of land for use by
public) (1) owner of land indicates by word/conduct intent (expressed/implied) to dedicate land
for public use; (2) must be an acceptance of the offer in some legal manner by appropriate
public authorities.
Express intent may be oral/written. Implied intent may be shown through recording
of plat showing public streets or other public areas. The offer is revocable until
accepted, once accepted, it becomes irrevocable.
Cartway Proceeding (landowner entitled to cartway if following req. are met) (1)
landowner engaged in/preparing to engage in cultivation of crops; cutting/removing timber;
working quarries, mines, or minerals; or operating public/private cemeteries; (2) no public road
or other means of access to landowners property; & (3) if its necessary, reasonable, & just that
landowner have private way.
Cartway MUST be 18ft wide; over the land of another & may include land owned by
a govt entity; & once established, it may be used for other purposes as well.
NOTE holder of easement has duty to make repairs if they are sole user. If used by the servient
estate and easement holder, courts will apportion the repair cost based on their relative use.
Easement Termination
Abandonment estate holder physically indicates clear intent to permanently
abandon. Words/intent alone are insufficient.
Estoppel where servient owner relies on easement holders conduct indicating intent to
abandon.
Necessity Ends
Destruction of Servient Estate will destroy the easement on servient estate. Doesnt
apply if destruction was willful conduct of the owner of servient estate.
Release by written deed to servient estate holder.
Merger terminates easement automatically if one person acquires title to both servient
& dominant estate.
Prescription owner of servient estate may extinguish easement through interference
w/ easement that meets elements to obtain easement by prescription.
Licenses & Profits
License personal privilege to enter land for defined purpose. It is not an interest in land,
its revocable, not subject to Sof, and not alienable.
Profit a Prendre right to enter land of another & remove resources from the land. Its
subject to same rules as easements.
Covenants promise to do/refrain from doing something relating to & concerning real property.
Affirmative Covenant promise to do something related to land.
Restrictive Covenant promise to refrain from doing something related to land.
Termination of Covenant (1) writing releasing, (2) destruction of benefitted &
burdened estates, or (3) condemnation of burdened property.
Remedy for Breach covenant (money damages) equitable servitude (specific
performance to force compliance w/ servitude or injunction to prevent further/continued breach)
Requirement for Burdens of Covenant to run w/ land (1) writing to satisfy SoF; (2)
intent to bind successors; (3) touch & concern land, i.e. affects how landowners can/cannot use
land (NC covenant MUST affect legal rights of covenanting parties as landowners, if not, this
element is not met.); (4) horizontal & vertical privity (Horizontal [NC requires this]: relationship
b/w original parties, i.e. grantor/grantee, LL/T, or mortgagor/mortgagee. Vertical: relationship
b/w original party & their successor i.e. successor must hold the entire held by original party they
recv the land from when covenant was made); and (5) notice (successor in interest to original
burdened party MUST have had notice of covenant when taking possession: inquiry, actual, or
record notice is required. NC only record notice will provide adequate notice.
purchaser is charged w/ notice when the restriction appear in their own deeds as well as
when the restriction appears in the recorded conveyances that constitute their chain of title.
Requirement for Benefit to run w/ land (1) writing; (2) intent by original parties to
bind successors; (3) touch & concern land; and (4) vertical privity (to satisfy, the successor may
hold any succeeding possessory estate).
Equitable Servitudes promise to do/refrain from doing something relating to & concerning
real property thats enforced through injunction.
Virtually identical to covenants, but remedy is injunction.
Requirements for burden & benefit to run are identical to covenants except that neither
horizontal nor vertical privity is required.
Equitable servitudes allow for equitable remedies, the std equitable defenses that will
apply are (1) estoppel, (2) acquiescence, (3) unclean hands, (4) laches & (5) if neighborhood
has significantly changed since creation of servitude, equitable relief will NOT be granted.
NC adheres to the view that in changed neighborhood conditions cases, the
changes MUST occur w/n the restricted area itself. Changes outside the restricted area (even if
directly adjacent to it) are not sufficient to justify holding restriction unenforceable.
Adverse Possession (AHEOC)
Adverse Possession title to property may be acquired by adverse possession which results
from operation of the statute of limitations for ejectment. To establish title by adverse
possession, the possessor must show:
(1) Actual adverse possessor actually occupies a reasonable portion of parcel.
(2) Hostile possessor entered w/o owners permission. Doesnt matter whether she
believes the land to be her own.
In NC, if possessor has conscious doubt as to his true boundary line, his
possession is not hostile if he intended to claim title to disputed area only if it was
included in land description.
a co-tenant MUST oust others OR make an explicit declaration that he is
claiming exclusive dominion to create adverse possession.
(3) Exclusive possessor is not sharing possession w/ true owner OR public. NOTE****2+
can obtain title by adverse possession; they will take title as TC
(4) Open occupation MUST BE sufficiently apparent to put true owner on notice that
trespass is occurring.
(5) Notorious possession is open and notorious when it is the kind of use the owner
would make of the land.
(6) Continuous possession MUST BE continuous throughout statutory period. Constant
use not required SO LONG AS possession is of a type that the usual owner would make.
adverse possessor can tack her own possession onto periods of adverse
possession of her predecessors, BUT privity is required.
statute of limitations will not run against a true owner who is afflicted by a
disability at the START of the adverse possession.
NC adverse possessor w/ COT is 7 years; w/o COT its 20 years.
Unlike most states, NC allows adverse possession of govt land; however, the SoL is longer (30
years w/o COT & 21 years w/ COT)
Effect of Disabilities in NC if @ time the cause of action to recover possession accrues the
owner is under disability of minority (under 18), insanity, or incompetence, she has 3 years after
the disability is removed to bring suit.
In NC disabilities cannot be tacked from one person to another. However, when 2 disabilities exist
at the same time the cause of action accrues or when disability supervenes one that existed at
the time the cause of action accrued, the limitation does not attach until they are both removed.
Land Conveyancing
Land Sale ContractsSoF MUST be in writing that contains the signature of the party to be
charged & essential terms (e.g. parties, description of land, price)
Part performance, e.g. possession, substantial improvements, and/or payment of
purchase price, can take contract out of statute. NC doesnt recognize this.
Doctrine of Equitable Conversion under this, once K is signed, equity regards the buyer as
the owner of the real property. The sellers interest is considered personal property. Bare
legal title remains in seller is considered to be held in trust for buyer. Seller entitled to possession
until closing.
Risk of Loss: if property destroyed w/o fault of either party before closing, majority
rule places risk on buyer. Minority rule (NC), Uniform Vendor & Purchaser Risk Act places risk on
seller UNLESS buyer has title or possession at time of loss.
Liquidated damages if buyer defaults in performance, seller may retain the buyers
earnest money as liquidated damages IF amount appears to be reasonable in light of sellers
anticipated & actual damages.
Sellers Liability for Defective Property (1) Warranty of fitness or quality (new
construction ONLY), (2) negligence of builder, (3) liability for defects for sale of existing
land/bldg., (4) disclaimers of liability
(1) Warranty of Fitness/Quality K for sale & deeds of real property carry NO implied
warranty of quality or fitness for purpose. However, most courts (including NC) recognize a
warranty of fitness or quality in sale of new house by builder. The implied warranty is not
applicable to commercial structures.
although subsequent purchaser cannot bring action against seller-builder based on
implied warranty, he can recover in tort upon proof that he was damaged as a proximate result
of latent defects caused by builders negligent construction.
builder-vendor & purchaser can enter into binding agreement that this implied warranty
should not apply. However, this must be done by clear, unambiguous language; a provision in the
K that buyer has inspected property, no representations & inducements were made other than
those expressed in K, & K contains entire agreement, is not sufficient.
damages are usually cost of repair; however, if nature of the defect is such that it
cannot be remedied w/o substantial portion of work completed having to be destroyed, the
measure of damages is the diminution in value NC.
(2) Negligence of builderperson MAY sue builder for negligence in performing building
K.
(3) Sale of existing land/bldg.-->liability for defects seller MAY be liable to
purchaser for defects such as leaky roof, flooding basement, or termite infestation, on any of
several different theories such as:
(a) Misrepresentation (fraud) seller is liable for defects about which he
knowingly or negligently made a false statement of fact to buyer if buyer relied on
statement AND it materially affected the value of property.
(b) Active Concealment seller WILL BE liable for defects even w/o making any
statements if he took steps to conceal defects, e.g. wallpaper over water damage.
(c) Failure to Disclose seller liable for failure to disclose defects if (i) he knows
or has reason to know of the defect; (ii) defect is not apparent and seller knows buyer is
unlikely to discover it upon ordinary inspection; AND (iii) the defect is serious and would
probably cause buyer to reconsider the purchase if known.
(4) Disclaimers of Liability a general disclaimer in sales K (e.g. property sold as is
or with all defects) is NOT sufficient to overcome a sellers liability for fraud, concealment, or
failure to disclose. IF disclaimer identifies specific types of defects, it will likely be upheld.
DeedsForm & Content Deeds transfer title to an interest in real property. A deed MUST BE
(1) in writing to satisfy SoF, (2) signed by grantor, AND (3) reasonably identify the parties &
land. NC grantee MUST sign IF the deed imposes a personal liability on the grantee.
deed MAY validly convey real property by inter vivos gift so long as there is (i) donative
intent, (ii) delivery, AND (iii) acceptance
A void deed will be set aside even if property passed to BFP, but a voidable deed will
be set aside ONLY IF property has NOT passed to a BFP.
Void Deed includes those that are forged, were never delivered, were issued to a
nonexistent grantee, OR were obtained by fraud in the factum (grantor was deceived and did not
realize she was executing a deed). NC a deed is void if it was executed by persons who have
been judicially determined to be mentally incompetent.
Voidable Deeds include those executed by minors or incapacitated persons and
those obtained through fraud in the inducement, duress, undue influence, mistake, and breach of
fiduciary duty.
Description of Land Conveyed a description is sufficient if it provides a good lead to
the identity of the property. IF it is too indefinite, grantor retains title. Parole evidence is
generally, admissible to resolve patent or latent ambiguities if description gives a good lead BUT
MAY NOT be admissible where the description is inadequate.
Rules of Construction where descriptions are inconsistent/conflicting, these
methods of description are given the following order of priority: (i) natural monuments
(e.g. oak tree); (ii) artificial monuments (e.g. stakes, bldgs.); (iii) courses (e.g. angles);
(iv) distances (e.g. feet/yards); (v) name (e.g. Blackacre); and (vi) quantity (e.g. 300
acres).
Boundary Cases in variable boundary line cases (i.e. water boundary), the slow
and imperceptible change in the course of a river or stream operates to change the legal
boundary; accretion (slow deposit of soil on land abutting water) belongs to the abutting
owner. Avulsion (sudden change of watercourse) does not change ownership rights. Fixed
boundaries are not changed by encroachment of water.
DeedDelivery & Acceptance a deed is not effective UNLESS it has been delivered &
accepted.
Delivery refers to grantors intent to make a deed presently effective even if possession
is postponed. Delivery MAY BE satisfied by (i) manual delivery, (ii) notarized acknowledgment by
grantor & recordation, OR (iii) anything showing grantors intent to deliver. Parol evidence is
admissible on the issue of intent to deliver, BUT NOT to show that delivery was conditional. NC:
grantor MUST part w/ physical possession of the instrument and have intent for instrument to be
presently effective. W/O both there can be NO valid delivery.
Title passes upon delivery and CANNOT be canceled OR taken back. To return title
to grantor, grantee MUST draw up a new deed and deliver it to grantor.
Conditional Delivery if a deed is absolute on its face BUT delivered w/ an oral
condition, the condition is disregarded and the delivery is absolute. NC adheres to the view
that the grantors intent is paramount & thus there can be a conditional delivery to a
grantee. The rational is that such conditions do not violate the parol evidence rule b/c they
go to show that deed never became operative.
A properly executed & delivered deed that provides that title will not pass
until grantors death is valid & creates future interest in grantee.
If grantor gives deed to 3rd party w/ instructions to give to grantee, there is
valid delivery. If grantor fails to give instructions, the validity of delivery depends on
whether 3rd party considered grantors agent. If so, there is no delivery.
Delivery by Escrow a valid conditional delivery occurs when a grantor gives
deed to 3rd party w/ instructions to give to grantee when certain conditions occur. Parol
evidence is admissible to show that delivery is conditional.
Recording acts generally protect all BFPs from secret interest previously created &
provide a mechanism for earlier grantees to give notice through recordation. These statutes
require a grantee to record his deed to put subsequent purchasers on notice of his interest.
Proper recordation gives constructive notice of the first conveyance to everyone, so there can be
no subsequent BFPs.
Donees, heirs, and devisee ARE NOT protected b/c they do not value; however, a
purchaser from a donee, heir, or devisee of the record owner IS protected against prior
unrecorded conveyances of the record owner.
Shelter Rule a person who takes from a BFP will prevail against any interest the
transferor-BFP would have prevailed against. This is true even if the transferee had actual notice
of prior unrecorded conveyance. This rule DOES NOT HELP a transferee who previously held title;
she CANNOT ship through a BFP to get good title.
Types of Recording Acts there are 3 major types of recording acts BUT under all 3, the
burden is on the subsequent taker to prove that he qualifies for protection under the statute.
(1) Notice Statutes subsequent BFP (person who pays value & has no notice [actual,
inquiry, or constructive] of prior instrument @ time of conveyance) prevails over prior grantee
who failed to record. NOTE: subsequent BFP protected regardless of whether she records at all.
(2) Race-Notice Statutes subsequent BFP is protected ONLY IF she takes w/o notice
AND records before prior grantee.
(3) Race Statutes whoever records first wins. Notice is irrelevant. NC is a pure race
jurisdiction & notice is irrelevant except in following 2 situations: (1) need not record leasehold
estate of 3 years or less and (2) property conveyed subject to prior interest.
W/O Notice means that the purchaser had no actual, constructive (record), or
inquiry notice of a prior conveyance at the time he paid consideration & received the
interest.
Actual Notice includes knowledge obtained from any source (e.g.
newspaper, word of mouth)
Inquiry Notice purchaser is charged w/ knowledge of whatever the inquiry
would have revealed, even if in fact he made none.
Record Notice ONLY IF the deed is recorded in such a manner that a
searcher could reasonably find it.
Wild Deeds is a recorded deed that is not connected to the chain of
title. It DOES NOT impart constructive notice b/c a subsequent purchaser could not
feasibly find it.
Security Interest in Real Estate
Types of Security Interest there are 6 types of security interest in real estate, the first 3 are
the most important: (1) mortgage, (2) deed of trust, (3) installment land contract, (4) absolute
deed, (5) sale-leaseback, and (6) equitable vendors lien.
(1) Mortgage debtor/note-maker is usually the mortgagor. Lender is the mortgagee. On
default, the lender can realize on the mortgaged real estate by having a judicial foreclosure sale
conducted by the sheriff.
(1) Lien Theory (Majority View) mortgagee considered holder of a security interest
ONLY and mortgagor deemed owner of land until foreclosure. Mortgagee CANNOT take
possession w/o consent upon mortgagor default.
(2) Title Theory (Minority View) legal title in mortgagee UNTIL mortgage is satisfied
OR foreclosed, AND mortgagee entitled to possession upon demand @ any time, i.e. mortgagee
CAN take possession on default.
(3) Intermediate Theory legal title in mortgagor UNTIL default and upon default legal
title in mortgagee. Mortgagee MAY demand possession when default occurs.
most mortgagees DONT WANT possession b/c of the risk of liability and rather attempt
to intercept rents b4 foreclosure by getting a receiver appointed by the court to manage
property. Courts WILL appoint receiver IF: (i) waste is occurring, (ii) value of property
inadequate to secure debt, AND (iii) mortgagor insolvent.
Foreclosure by sale is required in all most all states under which the property is sold to satisfy
the debt in whole or part. All states allow for judicial sale, some states allow for non-judicial sale
under a power of sale. Foreclosure sales are usually conducted by auction & lender is permitted
to bid @ the sale.
Redemption in equity can occur at any time prior to foreclosure sale if mortgagor pays
amount due. IF note contains acceleration clause, the full balance of note/mortgage MUST BE
paid to redeem. MUST also pay any interest. This right CANNOT BE waived in mortgage.
Statutory Redemption is allowed in about half the states and allows the mortgagor
to redeem property for some fixed period after foreclosure sale has occurred.
Priorities mortgages priority usually determined by the time it was placed on property.
Foreclosure DOESNT destroy any interest SENIOR to the interest being foreclosed. It generally
destroys all JUNIOR interest, BUT failure to include junior interest in foreclosure action results in
preservation of that partys interest.
Purchase Money Mortgages (PMM) is a mortgage given in exchange for funds
used to purchase property. PMMs are given either to seller as part of purchase price OR to
3rd party lender. PMMs have priority over mortgages, liens, and other claims against
mortgagor that arise prior to mortgagors acquisition of title.
However, subsequent mortgages or liens MAY defeat PMM priority by
operation of the recording acts. As b/w 2 PMMs, a sellers mortgage generally has
priority over a 3rd partys. If there are two 3rd party PMMs, priority determined by
chronological order. USUALLY 2 PMMs have notice of others existence; thus, the
recording acts are of no use in determining priority.
Proceeds of Sale applied (1) to expenses of the sale, attorneys fees, and court cost;
(2) then to principal & accrued interest on foreclosed loan; (3) then to any other junior interest
in order of their priority; (4) finally to mortgagor if anything is remaining.
If proceeds are insufficient to satisfy mortgage debt, mortgagee retains a
personal cause of action against mortgagor for the deficiency. This is called a deficiency
judgment.
Rights Incidental to Ownership of Land
(Natural Rights)
Generally an owner of real property has the exclusive right to use & possess the surface,
airspace, & soil of the property.
taking the court will balance (i) the social goals of the regulation, (ii) the diminution in value of
the property, and (iii) whether the regulation substantially interferes with distinct, investmentbacked expectations of the owner.
Zoning
State may enact statutes to reasonably control the use of land for the protection of the health,
safety, morals, and welfare of its citizens. The zoning power is based on the states police power
and is limited by the DP Clause & EQ Clause of the 14 th Amendment, and the no taking w/o just
compensation clause of the 5th.
Variance is a departure from the literal restrictions of a zoning ordinance granted by
administrative action.
Nonconforming Use a use that @ the time of passage of zoning act that does not
conform to the statute CANNOT BE eliminated at once. Amortization is the gradual elimination of
such uses.
Unconstitutional Exactions a zoning ordinance may so reduce the value of real
property that it constitutes a taking under the 5 th & 14th Amendment. If the ordinance constitutes
a taking, the local govt must pay damages to landowner equal to value of reduction. If the
ordinance regulates activity that would be considered a nuisance under common law, it will not
be a taking if it leaves the land w/ no economic value.
Property Exempt from Judgment debtor may choose either the constitutions homestead &
personal exemptions OR the statutory exemptions but cannot elect both. NOTE: regardless of
which exemption claimed, property can be reached to pay (1) taxes, (2) obligations incurred for
the purchase price, and (3) mechanics or laborers liens. Both exemptions protect the debtors
life insurance.
Property Exempt Under Constitution NC establishes a homestead exemption of a
minimum of 1K. It also provides a minimum exemption of $500 for the debtors personal
property.
What May Be Claimed a homestead is not an estate in land but rather an
exemption from sale or execution for the collection of a debt. A debtor who mortgages her
property is entitled to a homestead in equity of redemption; however, it remains subject to
the mortgage debt.
Duration of Homestead once property is established as homestead, it can lose this
identity only by death, abandonment, or alienation. However, b/c its purpose is to protect
the family home from the demands of creditors, the exemption will persist after the
owners death for the benefit of her minor children or if none exist, her surviving spouse
until remarriage.
Property Exempt by Statute judgment debtor may opt for exemption by statute
instead of the constitutional exemptions.
Residential Exemption under the statute, debtor can exempt her aggregate
interest in (i) real or personal property used as a residence or (ii) a burial plot for a value
not to exceed 35K or 60K for unmarried debtor over age 64 who took through right of
survivorship. If debtor does not use entire exemption, she may claim up to 5K in any
property to make up the difference.
Personal Property Exemption by statute, debtor may also claim the following: (i)
up to 3.5K in motor vehicle; (ii) up to 5K plus 1K each for up to four dependents, in
household or family items (i.e. goods, apparel, books, furnishings, crops, musical