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Estates in Land and Future Interests

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Title: Estates in Land and Future Interests


1
Estates in Land and Future Interests
2
The Feudal Structure
  • 1066 (Norman Conquest)
  • Concept of subinfeudation

The King
Services
The Peasants
3
Freehold and Nonfreehold Estates
  • The concept of seisen
  • Possession plus obligation to perform incidences
    of feudal tenure
  • Incidents of freehold estates
  • Homage and fealty
  • Aids (Ransom money)
  • Fines
  • Typically payable on conveyance by substitution,
    not subinfeudation
  • Relief
  • Form of feudal inheritance tax when land passed
    to heir
  • Wardship and Marriage (a real cash cow)
  • Nonfreehold estates
  • Ancestor of current leases

4
The Statute Quia Emptores Terrarum
  • Subinfeudation vs. substitution
  • 1290 The Statute Quia Emptores

Makes land freely alienable without payment of
the fine
5
Common law versus equitable estates
6
Common law estates
  • Holder of present possessory estatehad seisen
  • Estates created as a use
  • The utility of the use
  • Ability to will property away and deprive King of
    the relief
  • The Statute of Uses (1536)
  • The Statute of Wills (1540)

7
Important Common Law Statutes
  • De donis 1285 (coverts fee simple conditional
    into a fee tail)
  • Quia Emptores-1290 (makes property alienable)
  • Statute of Uses 1536 (Converts equitable estates
    created by way of a use into legal estates
  • Statute of Wills 1540 (permits disposition of all
    property by will)

8
Types of Common-law Present Possessory Estates
  • Durational concept-Lasting to infinity
  • In Who?
  • Fee simple absolute
  • Fee simple determinable
  • Fee simple on condition subsequent
  • Fee simple conditional (pre-1285)
  • Fee tail (Statute de donis)
  • Life estate

9
Types of Non-freehold estates
  • Term of years
  • Periodic tenancy
  • Tenancy at will
  • Tenancy at sufferance

10
Future Interests
  • Recognized as common-law estates
  • Remainders
  • Indefeasibly vested remainder
  • Vested remainder subject to open
  • Vested remainder subject to complete divestment
  • Contingent remainder
  • Reversionary Interests
  • Reversions
  • Possibility of reverter
  • Right of entry for condition broken
  • Recognized as equitable estates
  • Executory interests
  • Shifting executory interest
  • Springing executory interest
  • Effect of Statute of Uses

11
Words of Purchase vs. Words of Limitation
  • Words of purchase-describe who takes by grant,
    gift, inheritance or bequest
  • Words of limitation-describe the duration of the
    estate taken by the transferee

12
A and his heirs
  • What are the words of purchase?
  • What are the words of limitation?

A Words of purchase
and his heirs Words of limitation
Infinity
13
A and his heirs-Critical Characteristics
  • What are the critical attributes of the fee
    simple absolute
  • Alienable, devisable and descendible
  • Lasts for a perpetuity

14
Exam Question
Oscar, who owns Blackacre in fee simple absolute,
conveys Blackacre to Barney and his heirs.
Barney has a (a) Fee simple absolute (b) Fee
tail (c) Life estate (d) Term of years (e) Fee
simple on condition subsequent
This question is worth one point
15
White v. Brown-The Fee Simple Absolute
  • What are the facts of this case?

Decedent willed her home to Evelyn White to
live in and not to be sold Ms. White brought
construction proceeding for court to declare that
will left her a fee simple absolute. Decedents
heirs (who are they?) claim decedent bequeathed
Ms. White only a life estate.
16
Words about Family
  • Spouse
  • Partner
  • Child
  • Issue / Descendant
  • Child
  • Grandchildren
  • Stepchild
  • Sibling
  • Ancestor
  • Collateral
  • Half-brother/half-sister

17
Forfeiture vs. Disabling Restraints
  • To A but if A purports to sell the property, then
    to B.
  • To A and the property shall never be sold

18
Exam Question
Oscar, who owns Blackacre in fee simple absolute,
conveys Blackacre to Charlie and his heirs.
Charlie has a (a) Fee simple absolute (b) Fee
tail (c) Life estate (d) Term of years (e) Fee
simple on condition subsequent
This question is worth one point-The correct
answer is (a)
19
Mahrenholz v. County Board Of School Trustees of
Lawrence County
  • What are the facts of this case?

20
Mahrenholz v. County Board of School Trustees of
Lawrence County
  • On March 17, 1941 property owned in fee simple
    absolute by W.E. and Jennie Hutton
  • On March 18, 1941 W.E. Hutton and Jennie Hutton
    convey to Trustees this land to be used for
    school purposes only otherwise to revert to
    Grantors herein.
  • W.E. Hutton died intestate on July 18, 1951 with
    Harry Hutton as his only legal heir
  • Jennie Hutton died intestate on February 18, 1969
    with Harry Hutton as her only legal heir
  • On May 30, 1973, School stopped teaching classes
    on property but thereafter used it to store
    vehicles
  • On May 7, 1977, Harry conveys to Mahrenholz
  • On September 6, 1977, Harry disclaims interest
  • Plaintiffs sue to quiet title

Illinois Statute?
21
Fee Simple Determinable vs. Fee Simple on
Condition Subsequent
  • If the limitation or condition is violated when
    does the cause of action begin to run if the
    holder of the possibility of reverter or right of
    entry for condition broken has to sue for
    possession
  • Conceptually
  • By case law

22
Fee Simple Determinable vs. Fee Simple on
Condition Subsequent
  • O to A and his heirs so long as no liquor is sold
    on the premises (WP/WL)
  • O to A and his heirs provided that if liquor is
    sold on the premises O may re-enter and claim the
    property (WP/WL)
  • O to A and his heirs to be used for any purpose
    other than the sale of liquor
  • Rule of construction where conveyance ambiguous?

23
Fee Simple Determinable
O deeds Whiteacre A and his heirs so long as
liquor is not sold on the premises. A dies
intestate. As spouse (S) takes possession of the
area left of the black line, As heir (H) takes
possession of the rest. S sells liquor in the
shaded portion. What is the effect of this on H?
24
Fee simple conditional / Fee tail
  • How created?
  • Characteristics of estate
  • Before 1285
  • After 1285
  • Fee tail
  • Fee tail male
  • Fee tail female
  • Fee tail special

and the heirs of his body
and the male heirs of his body
and the female heirs of his body
and the heirs of his body with X
25
Robins Island Preservation Fund, Inc. v. Southold
Development Corp.
  • What are the facts of this case?

26
In 1715, Joseph Wickham, Sr.
purchased Robins Island. In 1734, JWS wills to
Joseph Wickham, Jr. "and to the male heirs of his
body lawfully begotten or to be begotten
forever." (Creating what?)In 1749, Joseph, the
tenant-in-tail, died and Robins Island passed to
his son, Parker Wickham. (Creating what?). In
1779 the New York State Legislature passed the
Act of Attainder of 1779 declaring British
loyalists as ipso facto convicted of "adherence"
to the British. (Effect on Parker?)In 1782,
the New York abolished the estate tail.
(Effect?)In 1783, New York ceases the land
declared confiscated by the 1779 Act of
Attainder. Parker Wickham fled to Connecticut
where he remained until his death in 1785. At the
same time, his eldest son, Joseph Parker Wickham,
his likely heir, left the United States for Great
Britain.In 1784, the New York State Legislature
passed an act for the sale of estates confiscated
pursuant to the 1779 Act of Attainder. Under
that Act, Robins Island was sold to Benjamin
Tallmedge and Caleb Brewster in fee simple. SDC
claims title to Robins Island as the
successor-in-interest to these two individuals.
27
Current State of the Fee Tail
28
Death without issue
  • O conveys to A and the heirs of his body, then to
    B and his heirs. State the title?
  • O conveys to A and his heirs but if A dies
    without issue then to B and his heirs. State the
    title?
  • At what point in time might it be determined that
    A dies without issue?
  • As death
  • When either at As death or the death of a
    descendant of A, there are no more living issue
    of A.

29
Life Estate
  • How created?
  • for life
  • O to A for life. What does A have? What does O
    have
  • O to A for life. A to B. What does A have? What
    does B have? What does O have?
  • B dies survived by A and O
  • A dies survived by B and O
  • O to A for life. A to B for life. What does A
    have? What does B have? What does O have?
  • B dies survived by A and O.
  • A dies survived by B and O

30
Problems
  • Problem 4, Page 276
  • Problem 6, Page 277

31
Trusts vs. Legal Interests
  • Problem 9, page 279

32
Future Interests-Review
  • Reversionary interests
  • Reversion
  • Possibility of reverter
  • Right of entry for condition broken
  • Remainder
  • Vested
  • Vested subject to partial divestment
  • Vested subject to complete divestment
  • Contingent
  • Executory interests (limitations)
  • Shifting
  • Springing

33
Remainder-General Definition
A remainder is a future interest limited in favor
of a transferee which may become possessory
immediately upon the termination (upon the
happening of a limitation) of a prior possessory
estate simultaneously created
34
Vested Remainder
An indefeasibly vested remainder is a remainder
that will, in all events, become possessory
immediately upon the termination of the prior
possessory estate (either in the remainderman or
her successor)-- no ifs, no ands, no buts.
35
Vested Remainder Subject to Open
A vested remainder subject to open (also known as
a vested remainder subject to partial divestment)
is a vested remainder limited in favor of a class
of persons collectively described (and typically
related to each other though a common ancestor)
of which there is at least one living member.
36
Contingent Remainder
A contingent remainder is a remainder that is
subject to a condition precedent. It also
includes remainders limited in favor of unborn or
unascertained persons for whom the condition
precedent includes either being born or being
ascertained.
37
Vested Remainder Subject to Complete Divestment
A vested remainder subject to complete divestment
is a remainder limited in favor either a born or
ascertained individual or in favor of a class of
persons of which there is one living member which
is subject to the happening of a condition
subsequent and not a condition precedent. If
the condition subsequent occurs, the vested
remainder could fail if the vested remainder
becomes possessory as a fee simple estate before
the condition subsequent occurs, the fee simple
will terminate. In both cases, another estate
(known as a shifting executory interest) will
either vest in interest or possession.
38
Shifting Executory Interest
A shifting executory interest is a future
interest limited in favor of a transferee which
can become possessory only by divesting the
present possessory freehold interest or a vested
future interest limited in favor of another
transferee. A divesting occurs only upon the
happening of a condition. Shifting executory
interests divest other grantees, not
grantors. (Note The one exception to this rule
was that a shifting executory interest is the
future interest in a transferee following a fee
simple determinable even though a fee simple
determinable ends, if it ends at all, upon the
happening of a limitation rather than a
condition).
39
Springing Executory Interest
The springing executory interest is a future
interest limited in favor of a transferee which
can become possessory only after some period of
time during which there is no other transferee
entitled to a freehold estate, and which, if it
becomes possessory, divests the grantor of a
retained interest in the property
40
State the Title-Part I
  • O conveys Blackacre to A for life, then to B and
    his heirs
  • Words of purchase words of limitation
  • State the title
  • A has a life estate, B has a vested remainder. O
    has nothing
  • O conveys Blackacre to A for life and upon As
    death to B and his heirs if B attains the age of
    21. State the title.
  • A has a life estate, B has a contingent
    remainder, contingent on reaching age 21, O has a
    reversion.
  • State the title if, during As lifetime, B
    reaches age 21.
  • State the title if A dies survived by B age 25

41
State the Title-Part II
  • O conveys to A for life and, if B survives A,
    then to B and her heirs. State the title.
  • A has a life estate, and B has a contingent
    remainder and O has a reversion
  • Suppose three years later, A dies. State the
    title.
  • Suppose A and B die under such circumstances that
    from all outward appearances it cannot be
    determined who survived whom

42
State the Title-Part III
  • O conveys to A for life and upon A's death to B's
    heirs. State the title, and, if it depends, on
    what does it depend?
  • Assume B is alive. Suppose B dies during A's life
    survived by X as his sole heir. At B's death,
    state the title.
  • If X survives A, state the title.
  • If X survives B but dies before A, state the
    title.
  • O conveys to A for life and upon As death and if
    B marries As widow, then to B and his heirs.

43
State the Title-Part IV
  • O conveys to A for life and upon A's death if B
    survives A then to B and his heirs but if B does
    not survive A then to C and his heirs.
  • Life estate in A, alternative contingent
    remainders in B and C, reversion in O
  • O conveys to A for life and upon A's death to B
    and his heirs but if B dies before A then to C
    and his heirs.
  • Life estate in A, vested remainder subject to
    divestment in B, shifting executory interest in
    C, nothing in O

44
Contingent Remainders v. Vested Remainders
Subject to Complete Divestment
  • O conveys to A for life and upon A's death if B
    survives A then to B and his heirs but if B does
    not survive A then to C and his heirs.
  • O conveys to A for life and upon A's death to B
    and his heirs but if B dies before A then to C
    and his heirs.

45
Contingent Remainders v. Vested Remainders
Subject to Complete Divestment
  • O conveys to A for life and upon A's death if B
    survives A then to B and his heirs but if B does
    not survive A then to C and his heirs.
  • O conveys to A for life and upon A's death to B
    and his heirs but if B dies before A then to C
    and his heirs.

46
Contingent Remainders v. Vested Remainders
Subject to Complete Divestment
  • O conveys to A for life and upon A's death if B
    survives A then to B and his heirs but if B does
    not survive A then to C and his heirs.
  • O conveys to A for life and upon A's death to B
    and his heirs but if B dies before A then to C
    and his heirs.

47
Contingent Remainders v. Vested Remainders
Subject to Complete Divestment
  • O conveys to A for life and upon A's death if B
    survives A then to B and his heirs but if B does
    not survive A then to C and his heirs.
  • O conveys to A for life and upon A's death to B
    and his heirs but if B dies before A then to C
    and his heirs.

Vested Remainder Subject to Complete Divestment
followed by a shifting executory interest
Alternative Contingent Remainders
48
  • O conveys Blackacre to A for life, then to B and
    his heirs if B survives A, but if B does not
    survive A, then to C and his heirs.
  • O conveys Blackacre to A for life, then to B and
    his heirs but if B does not survive A, then to C
    and his heirs.

49
Intermission
50
Intermission
51
Contingent Remainder, Contingent
Remainder Contingent Remainder, Contingent
remainder Vested Remainder Subject to Divestment,
Shifting Executory Interest Contingent Remainder,
Contingent Remainder Vested Remainder Subject to
Divestment, Shifting Executory Interest (and now
once more with feeling) Contingent Remainder,
Contingent Remainder Vested Remainder Subject to
Divestment, Shifting Executory Interest
52
State of the Title-Part V
  • O conveys to A for life and one day after A dies
    to B and his heirs.
  • O conveys to B and his heirs 21 years from now.
  • O conveys to A for life and upon A's death to B
    and his heirs but, if B dies without issue, then
    to C and his heirs. Remember this!!!!!!.

53
Exceptions to Right Eye Test
  • O deeds property to A for life, then to B and his
    heirs if B survive A.
  • B has a contingent remainder. Why doesnt the
    right eye test result in B having a vested
    remainder subject to divestment?
  • The 2 or more transferee rule
  • O deeds property to A for life, then to B and his
    heirs if B survives A but if B does not survive
    A, then to C and his heirs.

54
State the Title-Part VI
  • O conveys to A for life and upon A's death to A's
    children and their heirs. At the time of the
    conveyance A has no children. State the title?
  • One year later A has one child. State the
    title.
  • The next year A has another child. State the
    title.
  • The next year A has a third child. State the
    title.
  • The next year A dies. State the title.
  • Suppose, in the year A's first child is born, A
    desires to rent Blackacre to B for ten years.
    You represent B. What advice would you give B?

55
State the Title-Part VII
  • O conveys A for life and upon A's death to A's
    children and their heirs. At the time of the
    conveyance A has a child C-1 living. Thereafter,
    C-2 is born. C-1 dies in As lifetime leaving her
    spouse S as the sole devisee under her will. A
    later dies survived by S and by C-2. State the
    title.

56
State the Title-Part VIII
  • O conveys to A for life and upon A's death to B
    for life and, upon the termination of both life
    estates, to C and her heirs. If B dies before A
    would you conclude B never had anything?
  • O conveys to A for life, and upon A's death to
    A's children and their heirs but if none of A's
    children survive A, then to B and his heirs. At
    the time of conveyance, A, B and A's two
    children, C and D, are living. State the title.
    Three years later C and D die. State the title.

57
Class Closing Rules
  • The Walton Story
  • Physiologically
  • Rule of convenience- Class closes when ANY member
    of the class is entitled to demand possession of
    his share
  • No outstanding present possessory estate
  • No condition precedent unfulfilled for potential
    demandant within the class.

58
Class Closing Problems-Part I
  • T wills Blackacre to Bs children who survive T.
    B and three children of B survive T. State the
    title?
  • Suppose 2 years later, B has a fourth child. Is
    that child entitled to a share of Blackacre?

59
Class Closing Problems-Part II
  • O conveys Blackacre to A for life, and upon As
    death, to such of As children as survive A.
  • State the title.
  • At the time of the conveyance is the class gift
    to As children closed?
  • When will the class close?
  • Does the class close physiologically or under the
    rule of convenience, or both?

60
Class Closing Problems-Part III
  • O conveys Blackacre to A for life, then to Bs
    children who attain age 21.
  • State the title at the time of the conveyance.
  • A dies survived by B and by a child of B who is
    age 14. Is the class open or closed at As death?
  • One year after A dies, B has another child. Is
    this child included in the class?
  • Eight years after A dies, B has a third child. Is
    this child included in the class, and, if it
    depends, on what does it depend?
  • If B had died in As lifetime, what would have
    been the state of the title and which of Bs
    children would be in the class?

61
In re Estate of Earle
  • What are the facts of this case?
  • T died on 2/19/28
  • Gift of 100,000 for each and every male child of
    testators sons bearing the name of Earle
  • On 7/11/49 Anthony Wayne Earle was born
  • Is he entitled to 100,000?
  • This is a gift of a separate sum to a class of
    person, not a gift of an aggregate sum to a class
    of person
  • When does the class close?
  • At Ts death
  • At death of Ts last surviving son

62
In re Estate of Earle
  • What does the court hold.
  • Is the holding consistent with the rule of
    convenience
  • The rule of convenience would have closed the
    class at Ts death but the rule can give way to a
    contrary intent
  • What problem arises by holding the gift open
    until the death of Ts last surviving son?

63
Problem
  • T wills Blackacre to H for life, then to Ts
    heirs. At Ts death, A and B would be Ts heirs
    if T died intestate. At Hs death C and D would
    be Ts heirs. Who takes?

64
Remember
Estates and Future Interest Review Problems
65
In re Estate of Huston
  • What is the disposition in this case?

T wills property in trust to his wife for life,
then to his children for their lives and upon the
death of the survivor of them the whole of the
principal. . .shall be distributed in equal
portions to and among my grandchildren, the
children of any deceased grandchild taking their
deceased parents share.
66
In re Estate of Huston
  • What is the issue presented for decision?

Whether the remainder limited in favor of
grandchildren who predeceased testators last
surviving child but who left no surviving
children was transmissible through their estates
to their heirs or devisees. In other words, were
their interests impliedly subject to a condition
of surviving to the time of distribution
67
In re Estate of Huston-Competing Rules of
Construction
  • Court to construe language consistent with
    testators intent
  • Testator knew how to express conditions of
    survivorship in other sections of will absence
    of such expression with respect to
    grandchildrens gift suggests no such condition
    intended
  • Preference for vested construction?????
  • Preference that only living take so they can
    enjoy the property
  • Avoidance of taxes

68
O conveys to A and his heirs
69
Rule of Destructibility
  • At common law, if a contingent remainder was not
    ready to become possessory when the preceding
    estate terminated, the property reverted to the
    grantor (testator) and the contingent remainder
    was forever destroyed.

70
Rule of Destructibility
  • Purpose of rule
  • Not applicable to trusts
  • Not applicable to executory interests

71
Rule of Destructibility-Examples
  • O deeds Blackacre to A for life, then to B and
    his heirs if B reaches age 21.
  • During As lifetime, B reaches age 21
  • During As lifetime, B dies, age 18
  • At As death, B survives. B is age 22
  • At As death, B survives, age 18
  • O deeds Blackacre to A for life, then to As
    children who attain age 21. A dies survived by
    children ages 22 and 14. State the title?

72
Merger
  • The concept of merger (Life estates and next
    vested estates)
  • O conveys Blackacre to A for life, then to B and
    his heirs. B sells his remainder to A or,
    alternatively, A sells his life estate to B.

73
Rule of Destructibility-Exception
  • If the life estate and the next vested estate
    were created simultaneously with the contingent
    remainder, they life estate and the next vested
    estate do not merge to destroy the contingent
    remainder.
  • O conveys Blackacre to A for life, then to As
    first born daughter and the heirs of her body,
    then to A and her heirs
  • T wills Blackacre to A for life, then to Bs
    heirs and the rest of Ts estate to A.

74
Rule of Destructibility
  • Abolished in almost all states, except Florida

75
The Rule in Shelleys Case
  • If a life estate is created in A and a remainder
    is created in As heirs, the remainder is deemed
    to have been created in A rather than As heirs.
  • If after the Rule in Shelleys Case, A would have
    a life estate and the next vested estate, they
    would merge to give A a fee simple.
  • Reason for the rule?

76
Rule in Shelleys Case-Examples
  • O conveys Blackacre to A for life, remainder to
    As heirs.
  • O conveys Blackacre to A for life, then to As
    first born son, then to As heirs.
  • O conveys Blackacre to A for life, then to As
    daughter Emily and the heirs of her body, then to
    As heirs.
  • O conveys Blackacre to A for life, then to B and
    his heirs but if A returns from Iowa, then to As
    heirs.

77
The Doctrine of Worthier Title
  • If a remainder is limited in favor of the
    grantors heirs, the remainder is void and the
    grantor has a reversion
  • Rule of law
  • Rule of construction

78
Doctrine of Worthier Title
  • O conveys Blackacre to A for life, then to Os
    heirs.
  • If doctrine a rule of law, what does A, Os heirs
    and O have?
  • If doctrine a rule of construction, what does A,
    Os heirs and O have?
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