Title: Chapter 4 ________________ Forms of Ownership
1Chapter 4________________ Forms of Ownership
2One or More?
- Sole ownership (estate in severalty)
- Tenants in common
- Joint tenancy
- Community property
- Partnership
- Corporation
3Advantages of Sole Ownership
- Flexibility
- No sharing of profits
4Disadvantages of Sole Ownership
- Capital intensive
- No shared expertise in decisions
- Full responsibility and liability
5Tenants in Common
- Each owner has an undivided interest in the whole
property. - Each owners interest does not have to be the
same size. - Each owner can independently sell, mortgage, give
away, or dispose his individual interest. - Tenancy in common is established in the deed by
naming co-owners as tenant in common. - Each co-owner is responsible for his
proportionate share of property taxes, repairs,
upkeep, etc. - If a co-owner dies, his interest passes to his
heirs or named devisees. - No right of survivorship (the remaining co-owners
do not acquire the deceaseds interest unless
they are named in the will).
6Tenants in Common
One parcel of land Three owners with unity of
possession
C
A
B
What happens if C dies?
Cs heirs
B
A
7Joint Tenancy
- Right of survivorship - when one joint tenant
dies, his rights to the property are extinguished
and the other joint tenants are left as owners. - Four unities must be present
- Unity of time - joint tenancy must be created
simultaneously - Unity of title - joint tenants acquire their
interests from the same source (ex. Same deed or
will) - Unity of interest - joint tenants own one
interest together and each joint tenant has
exactly the same rights - Unity of possession - all joint tenants have use
of the entire property, and no individual owns a
particular part of it (Note unity of possession
is the only unity essential to tenancy in common)
8Joint Tenancy with Right of Survivorship
A
B
C
One parcel of land Three owners, four unities
(PITT) Possession, Interest, Time, Title If C
dies?
C
A
B
9Married Persons
- Tenancy by the Entirety
- Community Property
- Separate Property
- Note in the event of divorce, these forms of
ownership convert to tenancy in common.
10Advantages of Tenancy by the Entirety
- Protects one spouse from conveying or mortgaging
the couples property without the knowledge of
the other - Provides some protection against forced sale of
property to satisfy a debt judgment against one
of the spouses - Features an automatic right of survivorship
11Disadvantages of Tenancy by the Entirety
- Provides for no one except the surviving spouse
- May create tax problems
- Does not replace the need for a will to direct
how the couples personal property should be
disposed
12Community Property
- Ten states recognize community property (comes
from Spanish and French laws) - Spouses contribute equally and jointly to the
marriage and should share equally in any property
purchased during the marriage. - Each spouse can name in his or her will the
person to receive his or her 1/2 interest. It
does not have to go to the remaining spouse but
does in most cases by default if no other heir is
stated.
13Separate Property
- Property owned before marriage and property
inherited after marriage by gift, inheritance, or
purchase with separate funds is known as separate
property and is exempted from community property.
14Holding Title
15Partnerships
- General - all partners have unlimited liability
and illiquidity - Limited - one partner still has unlimited
liability and illiquidity of interest - Limited Liability - provides limited liability
for all partners - Joint Venture - partnership organized to carry
out a single business project. Treated as a
partnership for tax purposes, but becomes a
general partnership if more than one project is
undertaken.
16Additional Ownership Forms
- S Corporations - a popular form of ownership for
real estate investors because it combines the
limited liability of a corporation while avoiding
double taxation. Profits and losses pass through
as in a partnership.
17Additional Ownership Forms
- Trusts
- Inter Vivos Trust - a trust that takes effect
during the life of the creator - Testamentary Trust - a trust that takes effect
after the creators death. - Land Trust - in several states, an owner of real
estate can create a trust where he is both the
trustor and beneficiary. A third party is named
as trustee. - The land trust is a way of converting real
property into personal property since the
beneficiary interest is personal property. - Originally a way to hide true ownership of land.
Now used to simplify probate issues with owning
land across state lines.
18Additional Ownership Forms
- Limited Liability Companies (LLC)
- A very common form of co-ownership in the 30
states where it is a legal form of business. - Relatively simple to organize, limited liability
for all owners, and no double taxation. - Real Estate Investment Trusts
- A organizational form that invests in real estate
and allows investors to purchase shares much like
investing in a stock for a corporation.