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Ownership Of Real Property
Real property may be owned by a sole
owner, or it may be owned jointly by two or more person.
A person who is the sole owner of a parcel of real
property is said to be the owner thereof in severalty.
Concurrent ownership or co-ownership, on the other hand,
means simultaneous ownership of a given piece of
property by two or more persons. The several common
types of concurrent ownership are:
- Tenancy in common
- Joint tenancy
- Community property
- Tenancy in partnership
Tenancy In Common
A tenancy in common is characterized
by only one unity, that of possession. It is created
whenever an instrument conveyed an interest in real
property to two or more persons, does not specify that
the interest is acquired by them in joint tenancy or in
partnership or as community property. Interest may be
any fraction of the whole, thus one party may own
one-tenth, another three-tenth, and a third party may
own the remaining three-fifth. There is no right of
survivorship; each tenant owns an interest that on his
death vests in his heirs or devisees.
Joint Tenancy
Joint tenancy exists when two or more
persons are joint and equal owners of the same undivided
interest in specified property. The main characteristic
of a joint tenancy is the right of survivorship. When a
joint tenant dies, his interest in the property is
terminated, and the estate continues in the survivor or
survivors.
The usual method of creation of a
joint tenancy is by a deed describing the grantee as
follows: "to A and B, as joint tenants." The words "with
right of survivorship" are often added, but are not a
requisite, since this right is an incident of a joint
tenancy, whether expressly recited or not.
Problems have frequently arisen
regarding the true character of the ownership of
property by husband and wife as joint tenants.
Frequently such property, despite the status of joint
tenancy ownership, has been treated as community
property for purposes of succession, transfer,
disposition in divorce, or seizure by creditors. It may
be shown that property taken in joint tenancy was
thereafter converted into community property by either
an oral or written agreement.
The contention that joint tenancy
property is, in fact community property, is often raised
in divorce cases. The court does not have the power to
make an award of separate property, but if it is
established that joint tenancy property is in fact
community property, the court may award such property to
the innocent spouse. Although up the death of one joint
tenant, the title automatically passes to the survivor,
title insurance companies will require some formal
procedure before recognizing the new owner. Two methods
are followed:
- filing an Affidavit of Death of
Joint Tenant; or
- obtaining a court decree of death
of joint tenant.
Community Property
Community property is a creation of
the Civil Law of Rome and came to California via Mexico.
When the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo provided that the
property rights of Mexican subjects would be kept
inviolate, the early Californians felt compelled to
continue the community property system and it became
incorporated into the California constitution. In
general, community property represents the earnings and
accumulations of the marriage.
Persons who are not married to each
other cannot hold community property together.
All property of married persons that
is not their community property is the separate property
of one or the other. Separate property consists of:
- property owned before marriage
- proceeds of separate property, such
as dividends, rents, profits or property received in
exchange for separate property
- gifts and inheritances received
after marriage
- property agreed between the spouses
to be separate property
- earnings of the wife when she is
living separate and apart from the husband and
- earnings of the husband when he is
living separate and apart from the wife.
All deeds conveying community property
must be signed by the wife as well as the husband. This
is true, even through the property stands in the name of
the husband or the wife.
Common Forms Of Ownership Chart
How To Take Title to
Real Estate
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Tenancy in
Common |
Joint Tenancy |
Community
Property |
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Parties |
Any
number of persons |
Any
number of persons |
Only
Husband & Wife |
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Title |
Separate titles to each interest |
Only
one title |
Only
one title |
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Interest |
Separate, undivided |
Equal,
undivided |
Equal,
undivided |
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Possession |
Equal
right for each owner |
Equal
right for each owner |
Equal
right for each owner |
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Conveyance |
Yes,
of each share separately |
Yes,
but creates tenancy in common as to that share |
Only
if both spouses join in the conveyance |
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Death |
Passes
by will or intestacy |
Passes
to surviving joint tenant(s) |
Half
to surviving spouse; half by will or intestacy |
| New
Owner of Partial Interest |
Tenant
in common |
Tenant
in common |
Tenant
in common; no community interest |
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Creditor's Rights |
Co-owner's interest
may be sold on execution sale to satisfy his/her
creditor. Creditor becomes a tenant in common |
Co-owner's interest
may be sold on execution sale to satisfy his/her
creditor. Joint tenancy is broken, creditor becomes
tenant in common |
Co-owner's interest
cannot be seized and sold separately. The whole
property may be sold on execution sale to satisfy
creditor. |
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