REAL PROPERTY
278. Real Property Defined. The great English legal writer, Blackstone, divides all property into two kinds, real and personal. The latter embraces everything of a movable nature, while the former embraces everything of a permanent nature. Blackstone defines real property as consisting of lands, tenements and hereditaments. By land is meant the soil, and everything above and beneath the soil, the trees and vegetation above as well as the deposits beneath the soil. By tenement is meant anything that may be held, such as a franchise or right of way. By hereditament is meant everything that can be inherited. It includes lands and tenements. Under the English law, heirlooms were considered hereditaments. They are not so considered under our law.
279. Trees, Growing Crops, and Emblements. Growing trees are part of the land and are considered real property. Nursery trees may be planted by a tenant for the purpose of the tenancy. In this event, they are considered personal property. Trees cut down and cut into logs are personal property. Trees blown down or cut down, but not cut into logs are real property. Trees sold, but not cut, are regarded as personal property. A practical distinction between real and personal property is that real property passes to the heirs at the death of the owner, while personal property passes to the executors or administrators of the owner's estate. Personal property is first subjected in the satisfaction of judgments at law against the owner.
Emblement is the term applied to crops which must be planted annually. Such crops as corn, potatoes, wheat, and melons are emblements. They are personal property even though not severed from the soil. They belong to the tenant who plants them. Apples, peaches, clover, and similar things which are harvested annually, but are grown from roots or trees which are not planted annually, are real property. They are a part of the real estate, and pass with it when the latter is transferred.
280. Party Walls. A wall between two estates standing partly on the land of each estate is a party wall. If injured or destroyed by one of the adjoining owners, the other has an action for damages against him by reason thereof. If a wall stands wholly upon the land of one owner, and another constructs his house using a part of the wall as a foundation, he is a trespasser and is liable in damages, or may be compelled to remove his house therefrom. If, however, he is permitted to use the wall in such a manner for twenty years, the wall is regarded as a party wall. The party so using the wall for twenty years is said to acquire an easement by prescription. Party walls are owned in common by adjoining owners. Each party does not own half the wall. Both parties own the entire wall together.
281. Fixtures. By attaching a piece of personal property permanently to the land, or to something permanently connected with the land, the personal property, in law, becomes a part of the realty. A tenant may so attach personal property to the land of his landlord as to lose title thereto. No distinct line can be drawn between articles which may constitute fixtures and those which may not. It is something of a matter of intention of the one so attaching the articles to the land. It is now usually conceded by the courts that a tenant may attach such articles to the real property as are necessary and desirable for the purpose of his tenancy, and may remove them at or before the expiration of his lease, if the same can be done without injury to the real estate or to the fixtures to which they are attached. A different rule is applied in case of an owner as against a purchaser or mortgagee. For example, if A leases a building for the purpose of operating a dry goods store, he is permitted to put in shelves and to remove them at the expiration of the tenancy. If A were the owner, and permanently attached the shelves, he could not remove them as against a purchaser of the building or a mortgagee.
282. Fences. Most of the states have statutes regulating the building and maintenance of fences. Parties may enter into a contract relating to partition fences if they choose. The duty to maintain certain portions of a partition fence may result from usage. If A and B are adjacent owners of a farm, and A has for a period of twenty years maintained a certain portion of the partition fence, he may be compelled to continue to maintain that portion of the fence. A partition fence constructed jointly by the adjacent owners is their common property. It is their joint duty to keep it up. Either one has a right to go upon the premises of the other for that purpose. One person may construct a fence on his own premises, which he may rebuild or take away at pleasure. A person constructing a fence must use reasonable care in seeing that it is so constructed and kept up that stock coming in contact with it is not injured.
283. Private Ways. The right to go over the land of another is known in law as a way. Originally, ways were of three kinds, a mere foot way, a foot and horse way, by which a horse might be ridden over the way, and a cart way. The last two classes are now treated as one. Ways are classified as ways of necessity and ways of convenience or easements.
If A sells land to B and the only access B has to a highway is over A's land, B has a way of necessity over A's land. If A sells land to B and the only access to a highway left to A is over the land of B, A has a way of necessity over B's land.
A way of convenience may arise by continuous usage under a claim of right for a period of twenty years. If A for an uninterrupted period of twenty years, under claim of right uses a path over B's premises, he acquires a way of convenience or easement which gives him the right to continue the use of the path.
284. Highways. Ordinarily, highways are established by public officials acting under statutory authority. Land is taken from the owners by order of court granted upon a petition properly filed and heard. It is said that the public has an easement in a highway, a right to use the highway as a roadway. The absolute title remains in the original owner. If the highway is abandoned, the property reverts to the original owner or to his grantees or assignees.
A highway may be created by declaration or admission of the owner that a certain piece of property is to be used as a highway. It must also be accepted as such by public officials. The public may also obtain the right to use certain property as a highway by adverse user for a period of twenty years. This is called obtaining the right by prescription.
285. Estates in Land. The extent of the interest of a person in a certain piece of land or real estate is said to be his estate. Estates are designated by different names, depending upon the amount of the interest held. In general, estates in land are divided into freehold estates and estates less than freehold. Freehold estates are in turn divided into estates of inheritance, and estates less than inheritance. Estates of inheritance are divided into estates in fee simple, and estates in fee tail. Estates less than inheritance consist of dower estates, estates curtesy, estates for the life of another, and estates for one's own life, and homestead estates. Estates less than freehold or leasehold estates consist of estates for years, from year to year, at sufferance and at will.
286. Freehold Estates. Freehold estates embrace estates of inheritance and estates less than inheritance. They are estates of uncertain periods of duration. The estate may be one of inheritance, that is, forever, or for a lifetime. The term, freehold, is taken from the name, freeman. A freehold estate originally applied to the estate of a freeman. A freeman, that is, a person permitted to go anywhere he chose, belonged to the only class of persons permitted to hold estates of this character. The meaning of the term has lost its significance. Under our law, all persons are freemen.
287. Estates in Fee Simple. Absolute ownership in land is termed an estate in fee simple. It means that the owner has absolute and unconditional ownership of the land in question. It is an estate of general inheritance. At the owner's death, the estate passes to the general heirs of the owner, unless particular persons are designated by will of the owner to take the title.
288. Estates Tail. It was formerly the custom in England for wealthy land owners to give land to the oldest son to be given by him to his oldest son, a particular person or his direct heirs. That is, instead of giving the entire interest in the land to a person in such a manner that the latter could sell or dispose of it as he chose, it was given by deed or will to a particular line of heirs or persons. If A gave his property by will to B and B's direct heirs, the estate created did not permit B or his direct heirs to dispose of the estate in such a manner that the direct heirs designated could be deprived of the estate at B's death. Granting estates to a particular person or heir rather than to heirs generally, is called entailing estates. The estate granted is called an estate tail. The result of entailing estates is to continue them in the hands of a few.
England no longer permits the entailing of estates for long periods. In this country, the matter is controlled by statutes of the different states. A person is permitted to give real estate, by will, to a person for the latter's life, and then to a person not yet born. The latter takes the estate in fee. A person is not permitted to give property to A, and to the unborn child of the unborn child of A. If this is attempted, when A has a child, the latter takes an estate in fee simple. The above doctrine is called the rule against perpetuities.
289. Life Estates. An estate created to exist during the life of the holder, during the life of a third person, or until an uncertain event happens or fails to happen, is called a life estate. Life estates embrace homestead estates, dower estates, and estates by the curtesy. If A gives B a farm for life, remainder in fee to C, B takes a life estate. He may sell or transfer his life estate, but no more. If A dies leaving a will, by the terms of which B, his wife, is given a farm for life, or during widowhood, B takes a life estate in the farm. If she marries, she loses her estate. This estate may be created by deed as well as by will.
290. Estates by the Curtesy. At common law, the husband, at the wife's death, has a life estate in the real property owned by the wife, if issue has been born alive during the life of the wife. The husband may waive his right to the estate if he signs a deed with the wife, whereby he expressly waives his right to his estate by the curtesy. The interest of the husband in the estate of his wife, is at the present time in most states regulated by statute.
291. Dower Estates. At common law, at the death of her husband, a wife takes a life interest in one-third the real property owned by her husband during the marriage. If A owns one hundred acres of land, and dies, leaving a wife, B, B takes one-third interest for life in the one hundred acres of land. This interest of B is called her dower estate. Some states by statute provide that the wife shall have a definite share of the husband's estate at the latter's death. In the states having these statutes, the wife is not entitled to dower, but takes the prescribed share in place thereof. The husband cannot deprive the wife of right of dower, by transferring his real estate. If she does not expressly release dower in the deed of conveyance, it may be enforced against the estate, if she survives her husband.
292. Exempt Estates. The states generally provide by statute that certain property shall be exempt from execution on judgment obtained by creditors of the owner. Exemption statutes usually provide that a certain amount of real estate used as a home by the owner shall not be subjected to the satisfaction of judgments of creditors. If the debtor has no real property used as a home, he is sometimes permitted to retain a certain amount of personal property in place thereof. This statutory right to keep a certain amount of real property exempt from creditors is sometimes called a debtor's homestead estate. It exists during the life of the owner.
293. Estates for Years. The right to the possession, or the contract for possession of land for a definite period of time is called an estate for years. Originally in England, only freemen could hold freehold estates. Freehold estates are those of inheritance and those less than inheritance. Persons occupying a position inferior to that of freemen under the early English law, sometimes called villeins, were permitted to hold estates for years, but not freehold estates.
If A leases his farm to B for five years, B has an estate for years. If A leases his house and lot to B for one month, B has an estate for years. If A leases his house and lot to B for two years, and to C for three years, C's estate to follow B's, B and C have estates for years. Estates for years are also discussed under Landlord and Tenant. Estates for years are commonly called leases or leaseholds. A holder of an estate for years may assign or sublet his estate, unless it is provided otherwise in his lease.
294. Waste. If persons have estates for years or life in real property, certain rules for the use of such property are recognized in order that they may not destroy or injure the remaining estate. That is, if A has an estate for life in a farm, and B has the remainder, A is not permitted to destroy B's interest. If a tenant for life or years so treats the estate as permanently to injure it, he is said to commit waste. A tenant for life is not permitted to cut off the timber. He may cut out underbrush. If such is the custom in the vicinity, he may cut timber for fuel and to repair buildings and fences. The general rule is, that a tenant for life or years may so use the estate as not permanently to injure or destroy it. He is entitled to the fruits and crops, to cultivate the estate to advantage, but not to destroy the buildings or fences, or to so treat the land as ultimately to destroy its productiveness.
295. Estates at Will and at Sufferance. Estates at will and at sufferance are discussed under the title of Landlord and Tenant. They are estates in land, and are classified as estates less than freehold. An estate which may be ended at the desire or will of either party is known as an estate at will. If A and B agree that A may occupy B's house, A to pay thirty dollars per month, the tenancy to cease at the desire of either party, A is said to be a tenant at will, and the estate he possesses is called an estate at will. It is not transferable. If A attempts to assign his lease, it ceases. An estate at will is terminated by either party notifying the other of his intention to terminate the lease or by either party doing anything inconsistent with the estate. If the owner dies, the estate is terminated.
If a person has a lawful estate in land, and retains possession without right after his interest ceases, he is said to be a tenant at sufferance. If A rents B's house for one year, and, at the expiration of the year he still occupies the house without B's consent, he is a tenant at sufferance. He, in fact, has no estate in the premises except that which the owner suffers him to enjoy. This interest is called an estate at sufferance. A tenant at sufferance is a wrongdoer. He may be ejected at the will of the owner. The owner is not permitted to use excessive force in ejecting a tenant at sufferance. He may use the force necessary to eject him. At the present time, most of the states have statutory provisions by which unlawful tenants may be ejected by legal process.
296. Estates in Remainder. There may be many estates in the same piece of real property. If an owner of an estate in fee simple by one instrument grants an estate less than fee simple to one person and the balance of the fee simple estate to another, the latter estate is called a remainder. If A, an owner in fee, by the same instrument grants B an estate for life, remainder in fee to C, C has an estate in remainder. If C is living at the time the estate is granted, the estate in remainder vests in him at the time of the grant, and is called a vested remainder. If the estate in remainder depends upon any contingency, or is conditional in any way it is said to be a contingent remainder. If A grants a life estate in his farm to B, and the remainder to the heirs of C, the heirs of C cannot be determined until C's death. The estate in remainder is said to be contingent.
297. Estates in Reversion. An owner of an estate in real property in fee simple is permitted to grant his interest in the form of as many estates as he pleases. As long as the total of his grants do not equal his interest, he is said to retain an estate in reversion. If A owns a farm in fee simple, and grants B an estate for ten years, A's remaining interest is called an estate in reversion.
298. Title to Real Property. Title to real property or the right of the owner eventually to obtain possession of it may be acquired in several ways. Mere occupancy under claim of title will, under certain circumstances, if for a certain uninterrupted period of time, give the occupant title. An uninterrupted possession of real property, under a claim of right for a period in excess of twenty years will in most states give the occupant title by adverse possession.
Civilized nations provide by law that the heirs of the owner of real property shall take the title to the property at the owner's death. Estates less than freehold pass as personal property to the executors of the estate of the deceased owner. The statutes of the different states designate who are heirs.
Title to land owned by the government is transferred by public grant. Title by an owner may be conveyed to another by voluntary gift, by devise or will, or by deed. Title by devise or will is discussed in the chapter on Wills.
299. Deeds. The customary method of transfer of real property is by deed. A deed is a written instrument sealed and delivered for the conveyance of land. Deeds were originally divided into deeds-poll, and indentures. Deeds-poll were mere written obligations of the grantor delivered to the grantee, the grantee making no covenants. An indenture, on the other hand, consists of mutual obligation on the part of grantor and grantee. The obligation of each was reduced to writing, signed, sealed, and delivered, the one in exchange for the other. A lease is an example of an indenture. The term, indenture, originated from the custom of writing the obligation of both parties on the same piece of paper, and by writing some letters of the alphabet between the two agreements, and by cutting the paper through these letters at sharp angles. The separate obligations could be identified by fitting together the saw-tooth edges of the different instruments. At present, duplicate copies are made designating them as indentures. Leases are discussed more at length in the chapter on Landlord and Tenant.
At present, the form of deeds in common use are quit claim deeds and warranty deeds. Some states provide forms of deeds by statute. Even in the absence of statute, a written instrument, properly signed and delivered by the grantor, containing a description of the property, and an expression of intention to convey the real estate described, is probably sufficient to constitute a deed. A formal deed is customarily used. Transfers of real property are important transactions. A formal deed contains several formal parts known by different names. These formal parts have resulted from well recognized customs and practices, some of them dating back a great many years. The formal parts of a warranty deed are the premises, the habendum, the redendum, the conditions, the warranties or covenants, the conclusions and the acknowledgment.
300. Premises of a Deed. The premises of a deed contain the name and description of the parties. If a deed is given by an unmarried person, he should be designated in the premises of the deed as A B, unmarried. This enables abstractors of titles to determine that a complete transfer of title has been made. Otherwise there is nothing to show that A B did not have a wife at the time the transfer was made. In this event, the wife would retain her right of dower. The premises usually contain the date of instrument. Sometimes, the date is placed at the end of the instrument. The consideration is also contained in the premises. The consideration of a deed may be either good or valuable. If the grantor receives something of value, as money or an article of value, the consideration is said to be valuable. If a parent grants real property to a child or relative and states the consideration to be love and affection, the consideration is adequate, and is known as good consideration. The receipt of the consideration is also acknowledged in the premises of a deed. The language by which the grantor conveys the estate, such as "give," "grant," "set over," and "release" is contained in the premises as well as the description of the estate granted.
301. Habendum and Redendum Clauses. The premises of a deed are followed by the habendum and redendum clauses. The habendum clause describes the estate granted, whether an estate in fee, an estate for life, or an estate for years. It is not necessary to repeat the description of the estate in the habendum clause. The habendum clause usually commences with the words, "To have and to hold."
The redendum clause contains any interests or rights retained by the grantor. If the grantor reserves to himself the right to use a certain driveway, he places this reservation in the redendum clause.
302. The Conditions, Warranties and Covenants of a Deed. A warranty deed may not be an absolute transfer of real property, but may be conditional. For example, if the deed is absolute in form, but contains a condition that the transfer is to be of no effect if the grantor pays the grantee a certain sum of money by a certain time, the deed is a conditional one. The conditions above described constitute the deed a mortgage. This class of conditional transfer is discussed in the following chapter. Most deeds are without conditions.
The next formal part of a warranty deed is the covenant of warranty. The grantor covenants that he is lawfully seized of the estate. This means that the grantor has the legal title and right to possession, which right he conveys to the grantee. The grantor also covenants that the grantee shall have quiet enjoyment of the estate, that the estate is free from incumbrance, and that the grantor and his heirs warrant the title to the estate.
303. The Conclusion of a Deed. The conclusion of a deed contains the signature of the grantor and the statement that he has signed and sealed the deed. Most states require by statute that a deed must be signed in the presence of two witnesses. The signature and statement of the witnesses to the effect that the deed was signed in their presence is a part of the conclusion. The mere statement that the grantor signs and seals the deed makes it a sealed instrument. Seals were originally impressions made in wax affixed to the instrument. A scroll or flourish of the pen was regarded as a seal, but at present a deed is in itself regarded as a sealed instrument, and requires no seal nor substitute therefor.
304. Acknowledgment of a Deed. The states of this country require by statute, deeds to be recorded by the public recorder, if parties to the deed desire to give notice of the transfer to third persons. Third persons are deemed to have notice of deeds so recorded even though they have no actual notice. For the purpose of having a deed recorded, the grantor must acknowledge his signature before a notary public who adds his statement to that effect to the deed, and signs and seals the same. A quit claim deed contains no warranties nor covenants. It is merely a release of the grantor's interest to the grantee.